8 Wash. 236 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— Plaintiff brought this action against J. T. Long and others to recover for goods sold and delivered,
The briefs of the respective parties have gone extensively into the question of the liability of a county in this state as garnishee in a suit against the principal defendant. We do not find it necessary to discuss many of the questions presented by the briefs. There is much force in the position of the respondents that public policy will not allow the business of a county to be interrupted by proceedings of this kind; but we do not need to say anything in regard to that question. Under the statute law of this state (Laws 1893, p. 291), a county can only be sued upon a contract liability after the rejection in whole or in part by the board of county commissioners of a claim against the county growing out of such liability; and the general provision in the statutes (Gen. Stat., §§ 2437, 2438), relied upon by appellant, that counties are bodies corporate and may sue or be sued, must be interpreted in the light of other provisions of the statute, pointing out the manner in which it may be sued. This would probably be so if such section contained no express reference to other provisions of the statute, and when the right to sue is expressly limited to ‘ ‘ the manner prescribed by law, ” it is made clear that such section must be construed in the light of other statutory provisions. It must follow that the principal defendant could not, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, maintain an action against the county. If he cannot do so, the plaintiff cannot, as the general rule is that garnishment will only lie when an action could be maintained by the principal defendant.
We have been unable to discover anything in the stat
What we have said has been upon the supposition that the statute as to garnishment was broad enough to make it applicable to counties; but as to whether or not this is so is a question of grave doubt. But the other reasons which we have suggested being sufficient to sustain the action of the court below, it is not necessary for us to say anything in regard thereto.
The order appealed from must be affirmed.
Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.
Dunbar, C. J., and Anders, J., dissent.