76 So. 432 | Ala. | 1917
This appeal is from the judgment of the circuit court of Houston county, sitting without a jury, discharging the garnishee upon a hearing on a contest of the garnishee's answer on file. The statement of the case sufficiently discloses the contract which the garnishee Whatley had with the judgment debtor, Wofford.
Counsel for appellees in his brief states that the principal question presented on this appeal is:
"Could Whatley, after the service of the writ of garnishment and without liability to the plaintiff, make advances of absolute necessities to Wofford?"
The service of the garnishment writ created a lien in favor of the plaintiff by the express terms of the statute. Section 2948, Code 1907.
"The lien therefore attaches to any debt of the garnishee to the defendant owing at the time of the service, or at the time of the answer, or becoming due at any time between the service and the answer or the contest thereof, or in the future, under a contract existing at the time of the service or answer." Henry v. McNamara,
The evidence is without dispute that at the time of the service of the garnishment the garnishee Whatley had a valid and binding *491 contract with the defendant Wofford for said roadwork for Henry county. Whatley, the garnishee, having the original contract with the county, then entered into a contract with the defendant by which the defendant Wofford was to do the work for the garnishee; the latter to receive the money from the county, and pay the defendant out of the proceeds, less 10 per cent. which the garnishee was to retain for himself.
The proof shows without dispute that there was no agreement prior to the garnishment that the garnishee was to make any advancements to the defendant to carry on the work, but that, after the garnishment, he considered it necessary to advance the defendant certain sums in order that the work might go on.
In Archer v. People's Savings Bank,
"If the garnishee at the time of the service of the garnishment, or at the time of making the answer, or at any time intervening between these two periods, was indebted to the defendant Whiting, or if there was then existing a valid and binding contract by which such indebtedness would accrue in the future, this debt, unless exempted from legal process, was subject to garnishment, and the garnishing creditor would obtain a lien on it from the time of the service of the summons on the garnishee. Code 1876, §§ 3268, 3269; Code 1886, §§ 2945, 2946. The test must be, as uniformly and many times settled, whether the bank, as garnishee, owed the defendant such a money demand as could justly have been the basis of a recovery in an action of debt, or indebitatus assumpsit.
"If such a contract existed for a definite time, not by its terms dissolvable at the pleasure of one or both parties, it is perfectly manifest that no change or modification could be made in the terms of such contract, so as in any manner to destroy the acquired lien of the garnishing creditor, or otherwise prejudice his rights. * * * And if any part of the garnished debt was paid by the garnishee to the debtor in attachment during the pendency of the garnishment proceeding, such payment was at the risk of the garnishee, and can avail nothing against the garnishing creditor, if he is ultimately held liable on his answer. Skipper v. Foster,
In Fowler v. Williamson,
The case of McDonald Stone Co. v. SternMarx,
"Where the contractor goes forward with performance under the contract, as here, an advancement of a part of the contract price amounts to no more than a payment to him on account of that performance, and can have no greater effect upon the rights of a lienor than a payment to him after he has earned it. In this respect the case does not differ from that of a person upon whom a garnishment is served against the estate of another with whom he may have a contract. Unquestionably, if the party with whom the garnishee has a contract, declines further performance, he may set off against his liability the cost of completing the work, but if the original contractor performs the contract, the garnishee could not escape liability for the full amount of the money which he had advanced or paid after the service of the writ of garnishment. And the mere fact that he might have been damaged by reason of the failure of the defendant to perform his contract, and therefore it was desirable to keep the contractor at work, cannot affect the lien created and acquired by the service of the writ."
The opinion in the McDonald Case also directs attention to the fact that in the case of Mobile Street Ry. v. Turner,
We are of the opinion that the garnishee made the payments to the judgment debtor at his own risk, and that, under the authorities in this state, he must be held liable under the uncontradicted evidence in the case.
We are cited by counsel for appellees to the case of Allen v. Woodruff,
It results, therefore, from what we have here said, that, in our opinion, the court was in error in discharging the garnishees, and the judgment will be reversed, and one here rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the garnishees for the amount of said judgment indebtedness.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN, and SAYRE, JJ., concur. *492