162 Ark. 243 | Ark. | 1924
Appellant instituted an action below against W. T. Howe, one .of the appellees, to recover damages on account of alleged wrongful act of said appellee, and, at the tinte of' the commencement of the action, appellant sued out a writ of garnishment against appellee, W. B. Worthen Company, a domestic 'corporation. Appellant gave bond required by the statute as a prerequisite for the issuance of garnishment' before judgment. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 4906. The garnishee answered, admitting that it held funds belonging to Howe, defendant in the action. The surety on the bond originally filed by appellant appeared in court and moved to be released from the bond; the motion was sustained, and appellant was granted leave to file a substituted bond, which was done, with the Southern Surety Company as surety thereon. On a later day, during the pendency of the action, the Southern Surety Company filed its application in the action to be released from the bond, and, on hearing the application, the court granted it and ordered the said surety to be released, but granted leave to appellant to file a new bond within the time specified by the court — two days from the order releasing the surety. Appellant declined' to file a new bond, but stood upon the order of the court releasing the surety and discharging the garnishee, and has prosecuted an appeal to this court.
A motion has been filed by the appellees to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order releasing the surety and discharging- the garnishee was not final. We think that this contention is unsound. The garnishment is a proceeding which is ancillary to the main action between plaintiff and defendant, and the order releasing the garnishee finally disposes of that part of the action, and the order is appealable. Hatheway v. Jones, 20 Ark. 109. If this were not so, a plaintiff would be without a remedy to correct an erroneous order or judgment of the court discharging a garnishee, if the order of discharge was entered before the disposition of the main action. The injury sustained by the dismissal of the garnishment would be irreparable if the defendant should prove to be insolvent and the plaintiff should recover in the action against him. Our conclusion is that the case is properly here on appeal to review the action of the court in discharging the garnishee.
It is contended, in the first place, that the order discharging the g-arnishee was erroneous because it was rendered without notice. The record does not sustain this contention. The first entry made by the court of its order in this matter recited that appellant was present by his attorney, but there was a correction of this entry on a later day to show that appellant was not present, but that he had notice of the proceeding. This is borne out by the further fact that appellant filed his response to the application of the surety for release.
It is contended that the order of the court is not justified by the facts, and that it is void for want of jurisdiction of the court to make such an order. The statute authorizing- and regulating- garnishments before judgment confers no authority, in express terms, for a court to release the surety on the plaintiff’s bond, nor to discharge the garnishee, prior to the final judgment in the case, except when the garnishee answers and surrenders the funds or other property alleged to be in his hand's. But an application by the surety for release from the bond raises an issue between the surety and the plaintiff in the case, and the court has power to grant relief to the surety upon proper showing that the signature of the surety was obtained by fraud. The rights of the defendant in the action and the garnishee can be protected by an order requiring a new bond1, or, on failure to give a new bond, that the garnishee be discharged, as was done in the present case. In the absence of a showing in the record to the contrary, by bill of exceptions or otherwise, we must indulge the presumption that the court acted -upon evidence sufficient to justify the petition, and sustain the order releasing the surety and discharging the garnishment. Billingsley v. Adams, 102 Ark. 511; Armstrong v. Lawson, 128 Ark. 39; Heard v. McCabe, 130 Ark. 185; Laramore v. Radford, 135 Ark. 494.
The judgment releasing the surety and discharging the garnishment is therefore affirmed.