27 Ala. 414 | Ala. | 1855
The answer discloses that McCoy was indebted to the garnishees more than two thousand
But the difficulty in the present case arises from the fact, that McCoy was to receive in money such an amount only as was necessary to pay the expenses of his family, and the payment could only have been enforced in an action on the agreement itself; for the amount is uncertain, and the assumpsit of a character which the law would not imply. We have frequently held, that the remedy by garnishment did not extend to such cases —that only those demands were within its reach, which could be recovered by debt, or indebitatus assumpsit.— Self v. Kirkland, 24 Ala. 275; Cook v. Walthall, 20 ib. 334; Bostwick v. Beach, 18 ib. 80; McGehee v. Walke, 11 ib. 273. And the principle of these decisions is not affected by the Code (§ 2517), which, while it authorizes the application of the remedy to a debt which is not due, does not in any respect change the character of the demand which is the subject of garnishment. Whether due or not, it must be sufficiently certain to have authorized the party to whom it was due to maintain the actions we have mentioned.
Neither is the case affected by the 4th section of the act of 18th February, 1854, (Acts 1853-4, 26,) which does not make the salary, or wages, in every case the subject of garnishment, but simply exempts a certain portion of the salary in those cases in which it could be reached by this remedy.
As the demand which would have been owing by the garnishees at the time of their answer, was not in itself subject
Judgment affirmed,