5 Ala. 514 | Ala. | 1843
The question whether process of garnishment under our attachment law, can be sued out against executors or administrators, to condemn a debt due from the deceased to the defendant in attachment, although not directly adjudicated by this court, appears to have received its sanction. [See the case of Terry v. Lindsay, 3 S. & P. 317.] The garnishees in this case were summoned under the 10th section of the act of 1839, permitting ancillary attachments to be issued in aid of suits already commenced in the ordinary mode, and gives to the levy on the debt, in the hands of the garnishee, the same effect as when original attachments are sued out.
Conceding then that a judgment may be rendered against an executor or administrator, as such, when summoned as a garnishee, can such judgment be rendered upon his answer, admiting the indebtedness of his testator or intestate, when he has been summoned to appear in his individual capacity. The levy of an attachment on property is, by our attachment law, a substitute for, and is precisely equivalent to service of personal process, and such levy creates a lien on the property attached, whether it be a chattel seized by the sheriff, or a debt attached in the hands of the garnishee. [Carey v. Gregg, 3 Stewart, 433; Thompson v. kllen, 4 Stewart & Porter, 184.]
By operation of law then, the process of garnishment, when 'served on the garnishee, creates a lien on the effects of the defendant in attachment in the hands of the garnishee, and as this consequence flows from the execution of the process, it results necessarily, that the debt whieh is to be thus attached, must be described in the mode pointed out in the statute, which is an allegation under oath, that the garnishee is supposed to be indebted to, or to have effects of the defendant in bis hands. It cannot, with any propriety be asserted, that the summons to the garnishees, in this case, to appear and answer what they are indebted to the defendant in attachment, created a lien on a debt which they did not owe, but were merely bound to pay, if sufficient assets came to their hands.
To test this matter, suppose that after the service of this garnishment, th¿ garnishees had paid the debt due from their
It may be that when summoned in their representative character, they may not be able to alledge any reason why a judgment should not be rendered for the debt, but that opportunity has not yet been afforded them, Their answer that their testator was indebted to the- defendant, cannot be construed into an assent to the rendition of this judgment, because they were expressly required to answer, not only as to their own indebtedness to the defendant, but also, whether they knew of any other person who was, obviously in the latter case for the purpose of ulterior proceedings. If the answer had disclosed that a third person was indebted, no one would suppose that a judgment could be rendered without notice to the party to appear and contest it, and yet-there is no sensible distinction between that case and the present. The admission that the testator was indebted, does not tend to prove that there are any assets in hand to discharge it, and yet the effect of this judgment is, that a return of no property found, would be evidence of a devastavit, so as to charge the garnishee personally.
We are, for these reasons, of opinion, that the judgment of the court below, against the garnishees, must be reversed.