The issue underlying this appeal is whether the bank’s loan officer trainee was an agent for the purpose of serving attachment papers upon the garnishee bank in accordance with N.C.G.S. § 1-440.26. Based upon a straightforward reading of this statute as applied to the facts in this case, we find that the loan officer was the bank’s agent and therefore the bank was properly served.
Plaintiff filed a complaint 14 January 1983, alleging a debt of $4,200 owed to him by defendant. Attachment proceedings were initiated concurrently, culminating in the service three days later of a summons to garnishee and notice of levy on Greensboro National Bank. Garnishee bank, which failed to respond to the summons, later filed a motion to dismiss the attachment and garnishment proceedings on the grounds that the process had not been properly served because it had been delivered to an employee who lacked the authority to accept service on behalf of the bank. The trial court denied the bank’s motion to dismiss, stating among its findings of fact that garnishment papers had been served upon Calvin L. Corbett, a loan officer trainee at garnishee bank, whose duties at the time of service included discussing loan applications with applicants,
The Court of Appeals examined Corbett’s role as a loan officer in the context of N.C.G.S. § 1-440.26, which governs service of process in garnishment proceedings against corporate garnishees. That statute states, in pertinent part, that when the garnishee is a domestic corporation, garnishment process “may be delivered to the president or other head, secretary, cashier, treasurer, director, managing agent or local agent of the corporation.” N.C.G.S. § 1-440.26(a) (1983). The statute specifically provides some guidance as to who may be considered a local agent for purposes of service of process: “A person receiving or collecting money within this State on behalf of a corporation is deemed to be a local agent of the corporation for the purpose of this section.” N.C.G.S. § 1-440.26(c) (1983). The Court of Appeals concluded that Corbett’s “limited authority to accept a loan payment check from a bank client and carry it to a teller for deposit under the supervision of the branch manager [did] not constitute ‘receiving or collecting money on behalf of a corporation’ within the
meaning of the statute.”
Higgins v. Simmons,
The Court of Appeals then analyzed Corbett’s employment in the context of
Carolina Paper Co. v. Bouchelle,
The Court of Appeals erred in relying upon
Bouchelle
and in holding consequently that the garnishee bank was not properly served. Under the facts of this case, we find
Bouchelle
inapposite. N.C.G.S. § 1440.26(c) plainly states that one who collects money on behalf of a corporation is deemed to be a local agent of the corporation. This language is “intelligible without any additional words.”
State v. Camp,
Where supported by competent evidence, the trial court’s findings of fact are conclusive on appeal.
Lumbee River Elec. Membership Corp. v. City of Fayetteville,
Garnishee bank raised for the first time before the Court of Appeals the additional issue of whether the prohibition in N.C.G.S. § 97-21 against the assignment of workers’ compensation claims likewise prohibits the court from allowing garnishment of an account into which the proceeds of a workers’ compensation claim have been deposited.
First, “review [of an appeal] in the Supreme Court is limited to consideration of the questions stated in the . . . petition for discretionary review . . . and
properly
presented in the new briefs required by Rules 14(d)(1) and 15(g)(2).” N.C.R. App. P. 16(a) (effective 1 September 1988) (emphasis added). Because a contention not made in the court below may not be raised for the first time on appeal,
Plemmer v. Matthewson,
Second, the garnishee bank has no standing to enforce this right of its depositor under the Workers’ Compensation Act. “Standing typically refers to the question of whether a particular litigant is a proper party to assert a legal position. Standing carries with it the connotation that someone has a right; but, quaere, is the party before the court the appropriate one to assert the right in question.”
State v. Labor and Indus. Review Comm’n,
[W]orker’s compensation benefits derive solely from legislative enactments. Those enactments create new rights; only if rights and benefits are specifically conferred by the worker’s compensation act can it be said that they exist. . . . [T]he quasi-contractual status of the worker in relation to the employer is the result of a legislatively imposed social compact by which an employee acquires rights not recognized by the common law and the employer and its insurer are subject to only limited or scheduled liability. Only rights expressly conferred and liabilities expressly imposed are contemplated by the legislative intent of the compensation act.
State v. Labor and Indus. Review Comm’n,
Third, plaintiff does not seek to attach a
claim
for compensation, but seeks to attach compensation proceeds that defendant had deposited in a general account with the garnishee bank. Once the proceeds from a compensation claim have been deposited in a bank, they become indistinguishable from other funds on deposit. “When [the claimant] elects to part with the money the exemption ceases. It neither follows the money into the hands of the person to whom it is paid, nor attaches to the newly acquired property.”
Merchants Bank v. Weaver,
We hold that the bank was properly served in accordance with N.C.G.S. § 1-440.26. The decision of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Justice Frye did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
