50 Miss. 795 | Miss. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court:
This writ of error is prosecuted by Erwin, to revive a judgment rendered against him, as garnishee, on the suggestion that he was indebted to E. P. Tyree, defendant in the attachment suit brought by Heath.
Judgment final was rendered against Erwin for want of an answer. No irregularity has been pointed out in the proceedings against Erwin. But the assignment of errors impugns the regularity and validity of the judgment against Tyree, the debtor of the plaintiff Heath.
It is well settled, that judgment cannot be rendered against the garnishee until after the recovery of judgment against defendant in the attachment. Roberts v. Barry, 42 Miss., 260. Mandel v. McLure, 14 S. & M., 11.
The summons against the garnishee is original process, in so far as it seeks to establish an indebtedness from him to the defendant in the attachment suit, and to condemn that indebtedness to satisfy the plaintiff's demand. It is indifferentto the garnishee whether he pays the plaintiff or his original creditor, the defendant. He occupies the relation between the parties of a stakeholder or trustee. It is a duty, therefore, which he owes his creditor, as well as a proper regard for his own safety, that he should see that the law is pursued. Ford v. Hurd, 4 S. & M., 684.
Whilst the proceeding against the garnishee is a collateral suit,, in one aspect of it an original action, in another it is a means for procuring satisfaction of the recovery against the chief defendant, it is a dependency of the attachment, and, in that view, it is incumbent on the garnishee that he should observe the condition of that suit, and protest against judgment against himself, unless the plaintiff has put his demand against his debtor in the form of
Was, then, the judgment against Tyree voidable merely upon writ of error, or was it of no effect and void ? The law requires that notice shall be published for four weeks in a newspaper, warning the defendant m attachment of the pendency of the suit 7 and, also, that a copy of the notice shall be inclosed, postage paid, and put in the mail, addressed to the defendant’s post office, if the creditor, his agent or attorney, has indicated the post office by affidavit. Code of 1871, §§ 1472-1475; Patrick v. Dillard, 44 Miss., 385; Moore v. Williams, ib., 63.
The transcript certified by the clerk to be “ full and complete,,r contains what purports to be the usual order of publication, and also the proof of its actual insertion in the newspaper, as required by law. It does not, however, contain the affidavit of the clerk, as required by art. § 1475, that he forwarded a copy of the notice to the post office of Tyree.
A paper, separate from the transcript purporting to be a statement in short of the several steps taken in the cause, certified to be a copy of the entries, as the same appear on the primitive docket of the clerk, is also on file. It would seem that this docket, was kept by the clerk, as a mere remembrance, to aid him in making up the formal record of causes.
It can not control the transcript certified to us as “ containing a full, true and perfecl copy of the record of the proceedings and judgment, * * * as fully as the same appears of record,” etc. The clerk is directed by law to transcribe the papers and proceedings in a suit, in the final record book, and from that transcripto
The affidavit on which the order of publication is predicated, may be filed in court, or with the clerk; and the latter in vacation may make the order of publication. Code 1871, §§ 1472, 1473. In this case the affidavit was made before the clerk on the 17th of Sept., and the judgment rendered at the ensuing November term.
The 1475th section makes it the duty of the clerk to forward a copy of the notice to the defendant’s post office, by mail, and he shall make affidavit of the fact and file it with the papers in the cause. The record does not show that this was done.
Is the judgment against the principal defendant void or voidable for that reason ? The cases in our books are not harmonious. In Edwards et al. v. Toomer et al., 14 S. & M., 77, there “was no other service of process, nor anything equivalent to it, except such as was implied in the service of the attachment; ” the point ruled was, “that without service on the defendant, or publication of notice, or without appearance, no valid judgment can be rendered. Consequently “ the judgment of Toomer, Cay & Co. was void, for the want of notice to or appearance by the defendant King.”
In Ridley v. Ridley, 24 Miss. Rep., 655. The notice was published for four weeks in a newspaper in this state, and the precise question was whether the 15th section of the code (Hut.), p. 404, in reference to publication in some newspaper where the defendant was supposed to reside, was mandatory ; and if not complied with, what was its effect on the judgment. It was held that it was discretionary, and a failure to make such publication was not error.
In Calhoun, Bull & Co. v. Ware, 34 Miss., 146-7-8, it was held on the authority of the case last cited, that in cases of attachment against non-resident debtors, the giving of notice by publication, is not absolutely necessary to the judgment, * * the seizure
But is not the principle stated in Calhoun, Bull & Co. v. Ware sound ?
An attachment suit, under our statutes, is, or may be the blending of two processes, one strictly in rem, the other in personam. The former consists in the levy of the writ upon the property of the debtor, whereby it is made amenable to the disposition and judgment of the court, or it is the sequestration of the effects of the debtor, or of a debt due to him, by service of garnishment process. By that means the court obtains jurisdiction over th& u res.”
If the defendant is served personally with notice of the suit, it then assumes also the form of a personal action. One of these suits may come to a successful end, the other may fail. It was in this aspect of the subject, that we held in Holman v. Fisher, Ex’r, 49 Miss., 477, 8, 9, that although Eush, the defendant, died after appearance and plea, nevertheless the creditor could rightly prosecute his suit in rem, against the attached debt, and subject that to his demand ; to do that it was necessary that judgment should be rendered against the defendant, to avail no further and to have no other effect than as a means to subject the debt of the garnishee to the plaintiff’s demand. It was worthless as a personal judgment. No general execution could be issued for any balance unpaid after the debt of the garnishee had been applied and exhausted. It could not be the foundation of a scire facias, nor the support of an action of debt, in this or any other state. Its func
If the writ is not levied upon property, nor a debt attached, the court cannot proceed in that suit, and it comes at once to an end. The jurisdiction depends upon the seizure of the property, or the debt, and that may be exerted, upon the thing. The failure to pursue the formula of the statute as to publication of notice, or such informalities, does not make void the judgment as respects the property or debt. It may be alleged for error, and sufficient for reversal, but the judgment is not utterly invalid. Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wallace, 315.
Although it was erroneous to have rendered judgment against Tyree for the want of the requisite evidence of the mailing of the notice to him, we are disposed to accept the doctrine as stated in 34 Miss., 14(5, supported, as it is, by high authority elsewhere. The judgment against the defendant in attachment is not void for the reason alleged. Erwin, the garnishee and plaintiff in error, cannot assign those matters which are mere errors and irregularities in the proceedings against the principal defendant, as grounds for •reversing the judgment against him.
Wherefore it is affirmed.