137 Ga. 111 | Ga. | 1911
A judgment was entered in tbe superior court against a garnishee as being in default in not answering a summons of garnishment. At the same term of the court a motion was made to set aside this judgment, on the ground that the garnishee had in fact filed an answer to the second summons. The court sustained the motion, and the plaintiff excepted.
A summons of garnishment had been served on the garnishee in November, 1909, returnable to the January term of the superior court. Another summons of garnishment in the same case was served on the same garnishee on January 3, 1910, returnable to the March term of court. Attached to the second summons was a notice from the plaintiff, relieving the garnishee from answering the first summons, and requesting it to answer the second. On January 17, the garnishee filed an answer of not indebted. It recited that a summons of garnishment had been served upon it, but did not specify whether the recital referred to the first summons or the second. Inasmuch as the garnishee had been relieved from answering the first summons, and the only summons to 'which it was required to make answer was the second one, the court was authorized to hold that the answer was to the second summons. It is true that such answer was prematurely filed; but it was not void. If exception had been taken to it on the ground that it was filed before the term of court to which the summons was returnable, it could have
Even where a garnishee is in default, and a judgment is rendered against it, upon motion during the same term, setting forth good and sufficient reasons for not answering in due time, and denj'ing indebtedness to defendant, the court is not without discretionary power to set aside the judgment and relieve the garnishee from having an injustice done to it. Brian v. Banks, 38 Ga. 300; Wyley v. Whiteley, Id. 605; Russell v. Freedman's Savings Bank, 50 Ga. 575; Atlanta Journal v. Brunswick Publishing Co., 111 Ga. 718 (36 S. E. 929). It has been said, however, that this is not an arbitrary power, and that after the second term the court can only allow an answer to be filed by the garnishee upon showing some reason legally sufficient to excuse a previous failure to do so. Jones v. Bibb Brick Co., 120 Ga. 321 (48 S. E. 25).
Judgment affirmed.