On May 30, 1978, the Citizens & Southern Bank (C & S) obtained a judgment against Gordon Malloy, an independent manufacturer’s sales representative for Gant. On June 15, 1978, C & S filed a summons of garnishment against Malloy, naming Gant as garnishee. Gant answered the summons, stating that it owed no money to Malloy and held no sums which were subject to garnishment. C & S filed a traverse to Gant’s answer, "saying the same is untrue or legally insufficient.” Four additional garnishments were subsequently served on Gant, whose answer continued to be a denial of any garnishable sums. On each occasion Gant’s answer was traversed by C & S. All traverses were consolidated for hearing. The trial judge made findings of fact and, based upon those findings, concluded that there was an arrangement "constituting fraud and collusion” between Malloy and Gant which was being used to defeat the garnishment by C & S. Judgment was entered against Gant and in favor of C & S on its traverse in the amount of its judgment against Malloy. Gant appeals.
1. The evidence shows that some three years before the service of the summons of garnishment in this case Malloy, as an independent contractor, began to serve as a sales representative for Gant. In that capacity Malloy purchased from Gant, on open account, samples of its various clothing lines. Malloy’s indebtedness to Gant for these samples was maintained on Gant’s accounts receivable ledger. Malloy traveled in the southeast
*213
showing these samples and obtaining orders for their purchase. Gant advanced travel expenses, which were treated as loans to Malloy and which were maintained as accounts receivable to Gant. In addition, Malloy was authorized to make personal purchases from Gant on open account which were also carried by Gant as accounts receivable. Gant urges that as garnishee it had a right to set off any debts owed to it by Malloy and, since at all times applicable in the instant case its claim against Malloy on open account for the above referenced items exceeded its indebtedness to Malloy, the traverse to Gant’s answers should have been denied.
Elder Bldg. Supply Co. v. Wall,
"All debts owed by the garnishee to the defendant at the time of service of summons of garnishment upon the garnishee and all debts accruing from the garnishee to the defendant from the date of service to the date of the garnishee’s answer shall be subject to process of garnishment, and no payment made by the garnishee to the defendant or to his order, or by any arrangement between the defendant and the garnishee after the date of the service of the summons of garnishment upon the garnishee shall defeat the lien of garnishment.” Code Ann. § 46-301 (a). "The other arrangements referred to mean arrangements constituting 'fraud and collusion between the defendant and the garnishee.’ [Cit.]” W.
C. Caye & Co. v. Milledgeville Banking Co.,
The evidence in the instant case shows that at about the time that the first garnishment was served Malloy was indebted to Gant on all his accounts. Between the time of service of the initial summons of garnishment and the time Gant filed its last answer, it paid to Malloy $17,400 in "advances” on his commission. At about the time that the last answer was made Malloy was indebted to Gant in an amount many thousands of dollars more than he had been indebted originally and several thousands of dollars more than the $17,400 he had received from Gant during the same period. C & S urges that there was fraud and collusion between Gant and Malloy to increase the latter’s indebtedness to the former *214 so as to avoid garnishment and that the $17,400 "advanced” by Gant to Malloy during this time was made pursuant to this "arrangement” and violated the tenor of Code Ann. § 46-301 (a).
The issue formed on a traverse to an answer of a garnishee is whether or not the garnishee was indebted to or had assets of the defendant between the time of the service of the summons of garnishment and the time of the answer by the garnishee.
Aiken v. Smith,
Gant argues that the increase in Malloy’s indebtedness to it was solely the result of the pre-existing contract between itself and Malloy. However, the record indicates that whereas before service of the summons the balance of Malloy’s accounts with Gant had been
*215
occasionally reduced by Gant through credits applied from Malloy’s earned commissions, thereafter such credits from commissions were never applied by Gqnt to reduce Malloy’s indebtedness. Malloy’s indebtedness to Gant was allowed to increase without being reduced at all. In other words, after service of the summons Gant continued to "advance” Malloy without requiring any amount to be paid toward the reduction of the indebtedness owed to Gant. Compare
Oxford v. Metter Lumber Co., Inc.,
2. Gant’s reliance
on Hartsfield Co. v. Zakas Bakery,
Judgment affirmed.
