OPINION
Appellant challenges the garnishment of funds deposited by his wife in their joint bank account to satisfy a judgment entered against him. The district court and court of appeals, relying on
Park Enterprises v. Trach,
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In 1999, appellant Robert H. Lehmann, d/b/a Lehmann Engineering, Inc., entered into a lease for commercial property with respondents S.E. and Marlys Enright, d/b/a Pride-One Co. (“Enright”). In 2005, Enright sued both Lehmann and the engineering corporation for rents due. Leh-mann served a pro se answer denying liability on the grounds that the corporation, not Lehmann, was party to the lease. The corporation did not answer. Enright obtained a default judgment against the corporation and continued the litigation against Lehmann individually. Enright served discovery on both the corporation and Lehmann, but neither answered En-right’s discovery requests or a later district court order compelling responses. Lehmann also did not file his answer with the court. Ultimately, the court struck Lehmann’s answer, granted a default judgment against him for rent due and attorney fees, and awarded judgment against him for attorney fees for his discovery violations. Lehmann has explained that illness prevented him from understanding or participating in the lawsuit, but the district court and court of appeals rejected this explanation.
Enright v. Lehmann,
To satisfy the judgments, Enright garnished two joint bank accounts held in the names of Lehmann and his wife, Zandra Lehmann. Lehmann asserts, and Enright agrees, that Zandra deposited all the money in the joint accounts. Lehmann claimed that the accounts could not be garnished because the funds in those accounts belonged to Zandra, and he moved for an order staying execution of the judgments, dissolving the garnishments, reinstating his answer, and allowing him to amend his answer to assert a counterclaim. The district court denied these motions. The court of appeals, relying on
Park Enterprises,
affirmed and held that Enright was subrogated to Lehmann’s unlimited right of withdrawal of the funds in the joint accounts.
Enright,
In this appeal, Lehmann claims the funds at issue were not subject to garnishment because those funds were the property of his wife alone. At no time has Enright attempted to show that Zandra intended to confer ownership of the funds on her husband by placing them in the joint accounts; rather, Enright has taken the position that Zandra owns the funds but their location in the joint bank accounts renders them attachable by garnishment for Lehmann’s debt.
I.
As a threshold matter, Enright argues that Lehmann lacks standing to challenge the garnishment of the accounts. Although appellate review was neither requested nor granted on this issue, standing is essential to our exercise of jurisdiction.
Annandale Advocate v. City of Annandale,
Enright argues that Lehmann lacks standing to challenge the garnishment because the funds belong to Lehmann’s wife. *330 This argument is without merit. According to the terms of the account contract, Lehmann possesses the power to withdraw and use the funds in the account regardless of the original source of the deposit. We conclude that, as an invasion of this interest, garnishment of the funds causes him an injury-in-fact and vests him with standing to challenge the garnishment.
Enright also argues that this case is moot because the bank paid the garnished funds to Enright’s attorney, who — despite the fact that the funds were the subject of ongoing litigation — gave them to Enright rather than depositing them in his client trust account. An issue is moot if a court is unable to grant effectual relief.
In re Schmidt,
II.
Lehmann and amicus curiae Probate and Trust Law Section of the Minnesota State Bar Association argue that because the Multi-Party Accounts Act (MPAA) states that Lehmann does not own funds contributed by his wife to a joint account, those funds cannot be garnished to satisfy his debt. They also argue that by enacting the MPAA, the legislature abrogated Park Enterprises and any common law based on it. Enright responds that Park Enterprises is still good law and that the garnishment statute, Minn.Stat. § 571.73 (2006), grants him power to garnish the funds.
Construction of a statute on appeal is a legal question subject to de novo review.
Lewis-Miller v. Ross,
A. The Multi-Party Accounts Act
In 1973, the Minnesota legislature enacted the MPAA. Act of May 23, 1973, ch. 619, 1973 Minn. Laws 1472, 1472 (codified at MinmStat. § 528.01 (1974)). In 1994, the legislature renumbered the MPAA to make it part of the Probate Code, but did not alter its text. Act of Apr. 20, 1994, ch. 472, § 63, 1994 Minn. Laws 375, 415 (renumbering Minn.Stat. §§ 528.01-528.15 as Minn.Stat. §§ 524.6-201 to 524.6-214 (2006)).
Section 4 of the MPAA, titled “Ownership During Lifetime,” provides that “[a] joint account[ 1 ] belongs, during the lifetime of all parties, to the parties in proportion to the net contributions[ 2 ] by each to the sums on deposit,[ 3 ] unless there is clear and convincing evidence of a different intent.” Minn.Stat. § 524.6-203(a). The *331 preceding section provides that “[t]he provisions of sections 524.6-203 to 524.6-205 concerning beneficial ownership as between parties * * * are relevant only to controversies between these persons and their creditors and other successors, and have no bearing on the power of withdrawal of these persons as determined by the terms of account contracts.” Minn.Stat. § 524.6-202 (2006).
The language of the MPAA is unambiguous. In a controversy between parties to a multi-party account and their creditors, funds in a joint account belong to the parties in proportion to their net contributions. A party’s net contribution is the amount of money deposited by or for him, less withdrawals made by or for him. Therefore, we hold that where one party has contributed all the money in a joint account, a creditor cannot garnish the account to satisfy a debt belonging to a noncontributing party unless the creditor provides clear and convincing evidence that the depositor intended to confer ownership of the funds on the debtor.
Enright asserts that in enacting the MPAA the legislature must not have intended to abrogate Park Enterprises (which allowed garnishment of part or all of the funds in a joint account to satisfy to debt of one of the depositors) because there is no mention in the statute of creditor rights except the statement that sections 6-208 to 6-205 are “relevant only to controversies between these persons and their creditors and other successors.” Minn.Stat. § 524.6-202. Enright contends that this language is “opaque” because it is not clear how, exactly, the sections are “relevant.” On the contrary, we find the MPAA quite clear: section 6-203 applies where a creditor attempts to reach funds in a joint account, while section 6-202 allows the account contract to define the parties’ power of withdrawal.
Although our holding does not require us to look beyond the plain language of Minn.Stat. §§ 524.6-202 to -203, a brief review of the policy behind the enactment of the MPAA is illuminating. At common law, jurisdictions applied four different theories to determine ownership of funds in joint accounts: contract theory, gift theory, trust theory, and joint tenancy theory. Note,
The “Poor Man’s Will” Gains Respectability: Using the
Minnesota MultiParty Accounts Act, 1 Wm. Mitchell L.Rev. 48, 50 (1974). Although Minnesota generally applied gift theory, in which the intent of the depositor to make or not make an inter vivos gift determined ownership of funds in a joint account, “the vagaries inherent in the application of that theory made the label of limited value in predicting the outcome of actual cases.”
Id.
Moreover, “it was not even altogether certain that Minnesota followed the gift theory in determining the ownership of the funds during the lives of all of the parties. The case law on the issue is scant and conflicting.”
Id.
Despite the apparent general application of gift theory,
Park Enterprises
applied contract theory, in which the terms of the account agreement determine ownership of the funds, to hold that the entire amount on deposit in a joint account was subject to garnishment because the account agreement in that case made all funds deposited in the account “the property of the depositors jointly with the right of survivorship.”
*332
Perhaps in response to this uncertainty-in the law of joint accounts,
4
the legislature intervened by enacting the MPAA, which establishes a clear standard for determining ownership of funds and provides some measure of protection for assets in a joint bank account from creditors of either party. A joint account with a right of surviv-orship provides a “simple, inexpensive method of passing funds in the account from a deceased joint owner to the surviving joint owner, avoiding the necessity of probate proceedings.”
Deutsch, Larrimore & Farnish, P.C. v. Johnson,
If the creator of the joint account, whose intent is usually testamentary in nature, could be impoverished by the acts of the joint tenant over which the creator has no control, such as attempts of the other joint tenant or her creditors to reach the funds, there is great risk to the creator of the joint account. It may be these evils that [the Multi-Party Accounts Act] was intended to limit, lending stability and security to the creation of joint bank accounts.
Deutsch,
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
Deutsch
quoted from the official comments to Pennsylvania’s version of the MPAA: “ ‘[A] person who deposits funds in a multiple-party account normally does not intend to make an irrevocable gift of all or any part of the funds represented by the deposit. Rather, he [or she] usually intends no present change of beneficial ownership.’ ”
B. Other jurisdictions
One of the purposes of the Uniform Probate Code is to “make uniform the law among the various jurisdictions.” Minn. Stat. § 524.1-102(b)(4) (2006). “Laws uniform with those of other states shall be interpreted and construed to effect their general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact them.” Minn. Stat. § 645.22 (2006). While Minnesota’s MPAA was not initially enacted as part of the probate code, the legislature’s decision to move it to the probate code indicates the legislature’s desire that Minnesota courts interpret the MPAA consistently with those of other states. And while we base our holding on the plain language of the MPAA, it is instructive that other jurisdictions have apparently uniformly concluded that the MPAA applies to garnishment of joint accounts and that funds in a joint account belong to the parties in pro
*333
portion to their contributions.
5
Enright points out that Connecticut has allowed execution against the entire balance of a joint account to satisfy the debt of one account holder. But Connecticut has not enacted the MPAA.
See Fleet Bank Conn., N.A. v. Carillo,
C. The court of appeals decision
The court of appeals held that the MPAA did not apply and instead followed the rule of our 1951 decision in
Park Enterprises.
In that case, we affirmed garnishment of a joint account without regard to how much the debtor had actually contributed to the account.
Park Enters.,
The court of appeals declined to apply Minn.Stat. § 524.6-203 because it is part of the Probate Code, which according to the court “does not purport to govern relationships or rights of anyone other than decedents, missing or incapacitated persons, or minors.”
The court of appeals also reasoned that article 6 of the Probate Code, of which MinmStat. § 524.6-203 is a part, is entitled “Nonprobate Transfers on Death” and therefore applies only to “issues arising after the death of a joint depositor of an applicable bank account.”
Enright concedes that the MPAA applies during the lifetime of parties to a joint account. In addition to his argument that the MPAA is hopelessly vague, which we address above, he argues that
Park Enterprises
is still the law and seems to suggest that if the legislature wished the MPAA to abrogate
Park Enterprises,
it was required to mention the case by name. Enright is incorrect, because the legislature may abrogate common law doctrines “by express wording or necessary implication.”
Wirig v. Kinney Shoe Corp.,
III.
Although MinmStat. § 524.6-203 provides that funds in a joint account belong to the parties in proportion to their net contributions, MinmStat. § 524.6-202 provides that the account contract defines the parties’ power to withdraw funds. En-right argues that Lehmann had the right under the account contract to withdraw all
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of the money in the joint accounts and that Enright became subrogated to that right. In common law subrogation, a subrogee stands in the shoes of a subrogor and obtains the rights of the subrogor.
Employers Mut. Cas. Co. v. A.C.C.T., Inc.,
Enright also argues that he has a right to garnish all funds in the joint account under Minn.Stat. § 571.73, subd. 3(2). That section provides that all “money, or other property due or belonging to the debtor and owing by the garnishee or in the possession or under the control of the garnishee” is attachable by garnishment. As we have explained, funds deposited by Lehmann’s wife do not “belong” to Lehmann. The statute does not define, and we have not defined, what money is “due” a debtor within the meaning of section 571.73, subd. 3(2). If we were to construe all funds in a joint account as “due” to any party to the account and therefore attachable by garnishment to satisfy a debt, section 571.73 would negate section 524.6-203. We note that section 571.73 is a general procedural statute describing the process by which creditors in Minnesota may satisfy judgments, while section 524.6-203 is a specific substantive statute defining the ownership of funds in a joint bank account. “When a general provision in a law is in conflict with á special provision in the same or another law, the two shall be construed, if possible, so that effect may be given to both.” Minn.Stat. § 645.26, subd. 1 (2006);
see Reider v. Anoka-Hennepin Sch. Dist. No. 11,
Under the plain language of Minn.Stat. § 524.6-203, funds in a joint account may not be garnished to satisfy a judgment against a party who did not contribute the funds, unless the creditor provides clear and convincing evidence that the depositor intended the funds to belong to the debtor. It is undisputed that Leh-mann did not contribute any of the funds in the two joint accounts sought to be garnished, and Enright has offered no evidence that Lehmann’s wife, who did deposit the funds, intended to confer ownership on Lehmann. Enright, therefore, may not garnish those funds to satisfy his judgment against Lehmann.
Reversed and remanded for entry of an order that the garnished funds be redeposited.
Notes
. " 'Joint Account' means an account so designated, and any account payable on request to one or more of two or more parties and to the survivor of them.” Minn.Stat. § 524.6-201, subd. 4 (2006).
. " 'Net Contribution’ of a party to a joint account as of any given time is the sum of all deposits thereto made by or for the party, less all withdrawals made by or for the party which have not been paid to or applied to the use of any other party * * Minn.Stat. § 524.6-201, subd. 6 (2006). We interpret deposits "made by or for the party” to include deposits the party made personally or deposits made on the party's behalf by a third party, such as a paycheck deposited directly by an employer.
. " 'Sums on deposit’ means the balance payable on a multiple-party account including interest, dividends and, in addition, any deposit life insurance proceeds added to the account by reason of the death of a party.” Minn.Stat. § 524.6-201, subd. 13 (2006).
. This uncertainty was not confined to Minnesota. The Illinois Supreme Court noted that "[t]he familiar joint bank account has had an uneasy career in the courts because the relationships which it contemplates do not fit readily into common-law categories.”
In re Estate of Schneider,
.
See, e.g., Lamb v. Thalimer Enters., Inc.,
. We note, as a side matter, that subrogation stems from the equitable powers of the court, which must give due regard to the legal and equitable rights of others.
United Carolina Bank v. Beesley,
