157 Pa. 133 | Pa. | 1893
Opinion by
This is an appeal from a judgment entered against a garnishee in a suit commenced by a writ of foreign attachment. The judgment was entered on the answers of the garnishee to the interrogatories filed. It is contended by the garnishee that the debt due from him to the defendant is not liable to attachment. It appears from his answers that he employed the defendant from time to time to sell liquors and allowed him for his services commissions on the sales; that when the attachment was served he was entitled to commissions amounting to the sum of $125, and during the next seven months he earned and was paid commissions amounting to the sum of $399.78. The judgment includes the commissions earned and paid after, as well as the commissions earned and unpaid when, the attachment was served. The answers therefore present, prima facie, a ease in which a creditor is seeking to appropriate in satisfaction of his claim the commissions due from an employer to his employee. These1 commissions constitute the compensation of the employee for personal services performed for his employer under an agreement between them. Are they liable to attachment? It is provided in section 5 of the act of April 15,1845, P. L. 460, “ that the wages of any laborer or the salary of any person,in public or private employment shall not be liable to attachment in the hands of the employer.” It was the obvious purpose of this act to enable laborers and persons in public or
It is what the employer owes his employee, for personal services rendered in that relation which is exempt from attachment in the hands of the employer, and it matters not whether it is called wages or salary. In Commonwealth ex rel. Wolfe v. Butler, 99 Pa. 535, Chief Justice Sharswood, speaking for this court, said: “ The truth is, and this the lexicographers seem to hold, that if there is any difference in the popular sense between ‘ salary ’ and ‘ wages ’ it is only in the application of them to more or less honorable services. A farmer pays his
We cannot assent to the claim of the appellee that it is a necessary inference from the answers that the commissions were earned by a commission merchant, or “ broker.” The term “ broker ” in its largest sense is applied to a specialist who acts as the medium of negotiating and contracting any kind of bargain. Thus there are ship brokers, insurance brokers, real estate brokers, etc. The term is however emphatically applied to persons whose business it is to negotiate and effect contracts of sales between merchants: Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 2, page 572. In most countries a person who holds himself out to the public and engages in business as a broker must take out a license to enable him to act as such: Wharton on Agency, 458, sec. 695. In Pennsylvania, by the act of May 15, 1850, P. L. 773, all stock, bill, exchange, merchandise and real estate brokers were required to pay for their respective licenses “three per cent upon the annual receipts and commissions, discounts, abatements, allowances or other similar means in the transaction of their business.”
A traveling salesman who exhibits samples of and takes orders from purchasers for his employer’s goods is not, in a technical or popular sense, a broker, or factor, although he may be compensated for his services by commissions on the sales so effected by him. A salesman in the store of his employer may be paid for his services in like manner without becoming a commission merchant or taxable as a broker. In these cases the commissions are paid for personal services, and as we have already seen are fairly within the scope of the act which exempts from attachment in the hands of the employer the wages of laborers and the salaries of persons in public ox-private employment.
But it is claimed that the answers to the inten-ogatories are broad enough to include commission merchants and brokers as well as salesmen. If it be conceded that they are, and that a broker’s or a factor’s commissions are liable to attaclxmexxt, in the hands of the persons for whom he transacts bxxsiness, it does not necessarily follow that the judgment against the garnishee should be sustained. In such case the proper course is to require more specific answers or to direct an issue for the ascertaixxment of the particular facts. In this way the debtor, the creditor and the garnishee may be protected in the enjoyment of their respective rights in relation to the matter under investigation.
We do not think that a factor’s or broker’s commissioixs are exempt from attachment by virtue of the provisions of the act of April 15,1845. These commissions do not constitute, within the meaning of that act, the wages of laborers or the salary of
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.