97 Ala. 519 | Ala. | 1892
— On January 6, 1891, appellee, Crass, obtained in the court below in a regular proceeding by garnishment, a conditional judgment, in the sum of sixty-five thousand dollars, against the appellant, a private corporation, as garnishee of the defendant in attachment, the Decatur & Nashville Improvement Company. Two notices to the appellant of this conditional judgment were issued to and returned by the sheriff of the proper county “Not found;” the first issued March 14, 1891, and returned March 18,1891, and the second April 8, 1891, and returned the same day. There appears in the transcript, a paper purporting to be an answer of the garnishee of not indebted, made and filed by John S. Silver as its president, on April 29,1891. On the 19th day of June, 1891, the plaintiff, appellee, appeared in open court, by counsel, and moved the court to strike the alleged answer from the file and render judgment final for the plaintiff, on the grounds that the answer is without the affidavit of Silver’s authority to make it required by the statute, and because the garnishee did not appear and answer in the time and manner as required by law. The appellant likewise appeared by counsel, in open court, and resisted the motion, and, upon hearing and argument, the court rendered judgment final
The appellant assails the judgment appealed from upon two grounds: 1. That the court was without authority to render it because an answer fully answering the garnishment was then on file in the cause. 2. That the notices of the conditional judgment were not issued and returned in substantial conformity to the statute, and were therefore insufficient to bring it into court, and the court was', consequently, without jurisdiction to render the judgment final. To these grounds of attack appellee’s counsel replies that the alleged answer is of no validity for the want of Silver’s affidavit of authority to make it as the statute requires, and the court therefore properly disregarded it; and further, that it was filed, without leave of the court, after the garnishee’s default had been adjudged by the rendition of the conditional judgment, and whilst that judgment was still in force, for which cause it is insisted the answer was properly ignored; and that the defects in the issue and returns of the notices of the conditional judgment, if any existed, which he denies, were cured by the voluntary appearance of the appellant in defense of the motion for final judgment.
Affirmed.