This аppeal involves the notice requirements of Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 663a (Supp. 1987) in a postjudgment garnishment action. The district court overruled the appellant-debtor’s motion for new trial which alleged a failure to receive notice as providеd in Rule 663a. We will reverse the district court’s order and remand the cause for a new trial.
Controversy
This postjudgment garnishment action taken against Heritage Bank reflects an attempt by Norbanco to recover on a 1986 judgment against Jerry Hering. Although there is а factual question in this appeal concerning the ownership of the accounts garnished, we do not reach that issue because of our decision regarding the notice requirements of Rule 663a.
Rule 663a provides that the debtor in a gаrnishment action be notified in the following manner:
Service of Writ on Defendant
The defendant shall be served in any manner prescribed for service of citation or as provided in Rule 21a with a copy of the writ of garnishment, the application, accompanying affidavits and orders of the court as soon as practicable following the service of the writ. There shall be prominently displayed on the face of the copy of the writ served on the defendant, in ten-point type and in a manner calculated to advise a reasonably attentive person of its contents, the following:
To_, Defendant:
You are hereby notifiеd that certain properties alleged to be owned by you have been garnished. If you claim any rights in such property, you are advised: “YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO REGAIN POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY BY FILING A REPLEVY BOND. YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO SEEK TO REGAIN POSSESSION OF THE PROPERTY BY FILING WITH THE COURT A MOTION TO DISSOLVE THIS WRIT.” (emphasis added).
Norbanco concedes that it failed to comply with Rule 663a, and that the debtor, Jerry Hering, was never fоrmally served with a copy of the writ of garnishment. Nonetheless, Norbanco takes the position that if the debtor somehow receives actual notice of the garnishment, the notice requirements of Rule 663a are met. The record indicates that thе debtor inadvertently learned of the garnishment action when he attempted to draw on the funds held by Heritage Bank. In addition to this information, Heritage Bank forwarded to the debtor a copy of its answer to the writ. No other notice of any kind was givеn.
The question in this appeal is whether this information constitutes sufficient notice under Rule 663a.
DISCUSSION
In 1978, the Texas rules of civil procedure relating to garnishment actions were amended primarily in response to several prejudgment seizure cases decided by the United States Supreme Court.
See Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
Although the pre-1978 gаrnishment rules did not distinguish between prejudgment and postjudgment seizure procedural due process requirements, the Texas Courts of Appeals in the aftermath of
Wee Tote,
nonetheless, relied upon this distinction in upholding the validity of the post-judgment garnishment statute.
1
See Ranchers & Farm Livestock Auction Co. v. First State Bank,
By comparison, the same debtor in a
postjudgment
garnishment action would not even be entitled to notice. Following an adjudication of indebtedness, the debtor was supposedly put on constructive notice of all postjudgment actions which the creditor might pursue to enforce its judgment.
Endicott-Johnson Corp. v. Encyclopedia Press, Inc.,
Although an interesting legal question exists concerning whether prejudgment and postjudgment garnishment actions should be treated alike for purposes of due process requirements, 3 we are not, in this appeal, faced with that question. As noted *641 earlier, the Texas rules of civil procedure relating to garnishment, including Rule 663a, were amended in 1978. Whether a debtor in a postjudgment garnishment action is entitled to actual notice of the garnishment is no longer an issue under Texas law. Rule 663a is unambiguous in its requirement that the debtor be given notice of the garnishmеnt and of his rights to regain his property. No distinction is made between prejudgment and postjudgment notice to the debtor. 4
After the 1978 amendments, the debtor in a postjudgment garnishment
must
now be given actual notice of the garnishment in compliance with Rule 663а.
5
It has long been the law of this State that if a judgment-creditor intends to avail himself of the State’s aid in effecting a deprivation of property, he must strictly comply with the pertinent rules.
See Beggs v. Fite,
Our holding in this regard should come as no surprise. Since the adoption of the new procedural rules for garnishment pro *642 ceedings in 1978, prudent creditors have routinely complied with the notice requirements in both prejudgment and post-judgment proceedings. See Horsley, Collecting on Judgments, (State Bar of Texas Professional Development Program 1981) (“The Defendant in judgment is not a necessary party to the garnishment action, however, changes in the rule require that he be served under Rule 663a ”) (emphasis added); See also State Bar of Texas Collection Manual, “Postjudgment Procedures and Remedies,” § 13.87 (2nd ed. 1987) (indicating that not only must the debtor be served with notice, but that the same form of notice is required in both prejudgment and postjudgment garnishment actions).
At present, only one other Texas court has interpreted Rule 663a as amended.
Mullins v. Main Bank & Trust,
We have examined the backgroimd behind Rule 663a and the languagе employed by the rule. We conclude that Rule 663a is unambiguous and means exactly what it says — the debtor must be served. Accordingly, we reject the conclusions made by the Mullins court to the extent they allow constructive notice to the debtor оf the prerequisites outlined in Rule 663a. Jerry Hering’s first point of error is sustained.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Texas Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4076 (1966), repealed, Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 959, § 9(1), effective September 1, 1985. At present, the Texas statutory provisions pertaining tо garnishment may be found at Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. 63.001 et seq. (1986).
. In Endicott-Johnson, the Court explained the reason for not affording the debtor notice in a postjudgment seizure as follows:
The established rules of our jurisprudence do not require that a defendant who has been granted an opportunity to be heard and has had his day in court should, after a judgment has been rendered against him, have a further notice and hearing before supplemental proceedings are taken to reach his property in satisfaction of the judgment. Thus, in the absence of a statutory requirement, it is not essential that he be given notice before the issuance of an execution against his tangible property; after the rendition of the judgment he must take ‘notice of what will follow,’ no further notice being ‘necessary to advanсe justice.' (emphasis added).
Endicott-Johnson, supra 266
U.S. at 288,
. The continued validity of
Endicott-Johnson
is subject to dispute.
See Finberg v. Sullivan,
Rather than drawing distinctions of prejudgment and postjudgment due process requirements, the present approach taken by the Supreme Court in formulating specific procedural due process requirements emphasizes a broad balancing test.
See e.g., Matthews v. Eldridge,
It seems apparent that this balancing test wаs initially adopted in both
Mitchell v. W.T. Grant, supra
and
North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, supra.
In
Mitchell,
the seller’s interest in the property, measured by the unpaid balance of the purchase price, was weighed against the debtor’s interest in the same property. Considering the protections available to the debtor,
i.e.,
*641
a sworn affidavit showing the creditor’s claim and right to repossession, issuance of a writ of sequestration by a "judge,” the requirement that the creditor post bond before seizure, and the debtor’s right to an immediate post-seizure hearing to dissolve the writ, the Court concluded that both the debtor’s interests and the creditor’s interests in the property were adequately accommodated under the Louisiana sequestration laws.
Mitchell, supra
Likewise, in North Georgia Finishing, the Court struck down as unconstitutional a Georgia prejudgmеnt garnishment statute which failed to constitutionally accommodate both the debtor’s and creditor’s interests. Accordingly, it seems clear that the test employed is not limited to prejudgment and postjudgment distinctions, but is a balancing of the relative interests involved in either setting. Hence, if the property involved is accorded a strong interest (for example, a bank account or property potentially exempt from garnishment), due process requirements may afford the postjudgmеnt debtor similar or even identical protections as tire afforded the debtor in a prejudgment property seizure. See Finberg v. Sullivan, supra.
. The procedural rules governing garnishment actions are found under Part VI of the rules relating to ancillary proceedings under the subheading "Garnishment.” Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 657 et seq. (1967 & Supp.1987). While individual rules thereunder may speak more to either prejudgment or postjudgment garnishments, the rules, taken as a whole, do not make such distinctions, but apply in both instances.
For instance, we believe that the "judgment" referred to in Rule 664 is the judgment in the
garnishment proceeding, not the judgment that adjudicates the underlying debt owed to the creditor by the debtor.
Read this way, Rule 664 is equally applicable to either prejudgment actions or postjudgment proceedings, and the policy reasons giving rise to the notice requirements are equally strong in either case.
Compare
Tex. R.CÍV.P. 664
with
Tex.R.Civ.P. 669
and
673;
see also Swiderski v. Victoria Bank and Trust Co.,
. In addition to the notice of garnishment proceedings being taken against him, Rule 663a states that the debtor is to receive notice in tеn-point type that he has the right to regain possession of the property. This portion of the rule is no doubt part of an overall scheme of due process protections designed to prevent erroneous seizures of the debtоr’s property. Once the debtor receives the notice outlined in Rule 663a he should be apprised of his rights and may therefore elect to file a motion to vacate, dissolve or modify the writ. Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 664a (Supp.1987). By the terms of Rule 664a, the court is rеquired to hear such motion within ten days of its filing. Hence, Rules 663a and 664a work together to provide the debtor with the following notice and opportunity to be heard: (1) notice of the seizure; (2) notice of the right to regain the property; (3) notice of the proper legal remedies; and (4) an opportunity to have a prompt post-seizure adjudication of any challenges to the garnishment.
The key factor here is, of course, that the debtor receive notice of the garnishment as soon as practicable in order that he may avail himself of the legal protections which he is afforded under the law. To interpret Rule 663a to allow constructive notice would render the protections meaningless.
