29 Md. 533 | Md. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Code of Pub. Gen. Laws, Art. 10, sec. 30, authorizes any plaintiff having a judgment in any court of law in this State, to issue an attachment instead of any other execution against the lands, tenements, goods, chattels and credits of the defendant, in the plaintiff’s own hands or in the hands of any other person. Sec. 31, provides that if neither the defendant nor garnishee, in whose hands such property or credits were attached, appear at the return of the attachment, and show sufficient cause to the contrary, the court shall condemn the said property and credits, so attached and award execution thereof. By the Act of 1861-2, ch. 262, it is further provided, that executions by way of attachment may issue at any time within twelve years from the date of the judgment, the said attachment to be subject to the same defenses as in case of scire facias, if more than three years have elapsed from the date or expiration ,of the stay thereon. In this case, the garnishee appeared and filed a motion to quash the attachment for reasons assigned. He was not only required to appear, but to show sufficient cause to sustain his motion. No proof was offered to support several of the grounds relied upon. In Lambden v. Bowie, 2 Md.
We do not understand the offer of the plaintiff’s counsel, to prove certain alleged facts at the trial of the case, as admitting the truth of the allegations relied upon by the garnishee as grounds for quashing the attachment. There was no proof or pleadings to conclude the parties. Under the state of the case, upon the motion made by the garnishee, it was incumbent on him to sustain his motion by competent proof. The Act of 1861-2, ch. 262, above cited, is an answer to the fifth reason assigned in support of the motion. No proof having been offered in support of the second, third and fourth reasons, our attention must be confined to the first, which rests upon a matter appearing on the face of the record. The mere fact of the Sheriff’s return, that he had laid the attachment in the hands of the garnishee, as administrator, was not per se sufficient cause for quashing the writ. The provisions of the Code relating to attachments are very comprehensive in their scope, and it has been decided by this court that an attachment may be laid upon funds in the hands of a trustee; that is, that the process is not vicious because so laid before final account or distribution. In McPherson v. Snowden, 19 Md. 233, this court, in reviewing the previous decisions upon the subject, held, “ that they were not to be understood as deciding that an attachment cannot be issued and laid in the hands of a trustee before a final account, and that it would not be effective upon a sum ascertained by such an account to be the distributive share of the debtor in the attachment, but that the process, before the account is stated, cannot affect the fund or the trustee, or com
In view of these decisions, we cannot hold that the mere fact that the garnishee is an administrator, is a sufficient reason for quashing the attachment. Other questions have been argued in this case which were not before us for adjudication, upon which we express no opinion, but confine our decision to the precise point presented by the record, to wit: that the mere fact that an attachment has been laid in the hands of an administrator is no ground for quashing the writ.
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.