26 Tex. 283 | Tex. | 1862
The court rightly ruled that the-promissory notes in the hands of the garnishee were not liable to garnishment. (Price v. Brady, 21 Tex. R., 614; 23 Id., 508.) But the answer of the garnishee admitted that he had collected $185 upon one of the notes; but he claims the right to retain the money on his own account, because, he says, the debtor owed him and had given him the notes to collect and apply the proceeds to that indebtedness. This, if true, was a good defence; for the garnishee was entitled to every defence which he could have set up against the debtor.
The plaintiff undertook to disprove the statement of the garnishee, that he had received the notes to collect and apply the proceeds to the defendant’s indebtedness to him, and produced the receipt for the notes given by the garnishee, in which he stipulated to collect the notes and retain the proceeds until the defendant should return home and pay it over to him; or, if he could not collect the notes, to return them to the defendant as he received them, or
We think the court erred in refusing a new trial. The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded. '
Reversed and remanded.