161 N.W. 608 | N.D. | 1917
This action was begun by the plaintiff against John Iianson, Julia Iianson, Benedict Iianson, and Dina Hanson, defendants, upon a judgment which had been obtained against them in Clay county, Minnesota, upon certain promissory notes set out in the complaint. Garnishment summonses were served upon the garnishee Sterling on September 10, 1914, and upon garnishee Moody on September 14, 1914. Jury trial being waived, trial was had before' the court in the district court of Cass county, resulting in a judgment by stipulation upon the Minnesota judgment. Separate judgments were entered against the garnishees as follows: Against Robert Sterling •in the sum of $175.60, and against A. L. Moody in the sum of $863.05. Appellants Benedict Iianson and Dina Hanson have appealed to this court from the judgments against the garnishees.
In his assignments of error appellants’ counsel takes exception to certain of the findings of fact of the trial court and to the conclusions of law drawn from the-facts found. The questions of fact presented upon this .appeal involve in reality the sufficiency of the evidence to establish certain conclusions of fact upon which appellants’ main proposition of law depends. Briefly stated, the trial court found that on or about the third day of July, 1914, defendant Benedict Hanson went to the State Bank of Gardner (not a party to this action), and made an oral agreement with its managing agent, by the terms of which the said Hanson agreed to deliver to the bank the proceeds and earnings of his-threshing outfit for the season of 1914, to be applied by the bank, after paying the operating charges, to the payment of indebtedness due and owing by Hanson to the bank in the sum of $1,212.75, nearly all of which was past-due; that during the month of August certain moneys earned by Iianson in threshing for the garnishees Moody and Sterling were, in pursuance of the above arrangement and in compliance with written orders therefor, páid by the garnishees to the State Bank of
(1) That the transfer was but the assignment of a mere possibility coupled with no interest, Hanson having no contract with Sterling or Moody at the time of his arrangement with the bank. A careful perusal of the record in this case convinces us that the legal sufficiency of Hanson’s acts to devest him of his interest in the earnings of his threshing rig for the year 1914 cannot properly be decided by considering alone the transaction between him and the bank early in July, but that we must regard as well the dealings of the parties prior, to the service of the garnishment summons. It is a well-established rule of law in this jurisdiction that the liability of a garnishee is to be measured by his responsibility and relation to the defendant, and that the plaintiff cannot by garnishment place himself in a position superior to that occupied by the defendant as to the garnishee. Shortridge v. Sturdivant, 32 N. D. 154, 155 N. W. 20; Petrie v. Wyman, 35 N. D. 126, 159 N. W. 616. The plaintiff in this case was at the time of the service of the garnishment summons an unsecured creditor of the principal defendants. The garnishees Moody and Sterling were
The law requires the observance of no particular formality in the assignment of a chose in action. It was competent for Hanson to devest himself of all his interest in the future earnings of the machine, without the signing of any order and without the execution of any bill of sale, mortgage, or written instrument of any kind. Roberts v. First Nat. Bank, 8 N. D. 474, 79 N. W. 993. If no assignment were shown, and the evidence established that an arrangement was made whereby Hanson was to thresh for Moody and Sterling, and that Moody and Sterling were to pay the amount of the threshing bill to Hanson’s creditor, the bank, Hanson retained no interest in the proceeds that could be reached through garnishment by his general creditors. In Shinn on Attachments and Garnishments, we find this clear statement of the law applicable: “When a garnishee has contracted with the principal debtor that he will pay the money or deliver the property to some third person, then the plaintiff in garnishment cannot recover because he is only placed by the' garnishment in the position of the principal defendant, who could not himself recover from the person made the garnishee.” 2 Shinn, Attaclun. & Garnishments, § 516; Baker v. Eglin, 11 Or. 333, 8 Pac. 280. And in a case of this character the assent of the creditor to the terms of the contract made for his benefit is presumed. Rogers v. Gosnell, 58 Mo. 589. We are satisfied from the record and from the law applicable to the facts disclosed, aside from the possible effect of § 6706 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, that the plaintiff stands in no better position in respect to the garnishees than Hanson stood at the time of the service of the garnishment summons upon Moody and Sterling, and that at such time Hanson would have been unable to recover anything from them as against the bank.
The witness Mitchell, cashier of the State Bank of Gardner, and Benedict Hanson, are in substantial accord as to the arrangement made
In answer to the query as to business relations between Hanson and the bank, Mitchell testified:
A. As near as I can remember he came to me and wanted us to take care of his labor and expenses, threshing expenses, and he was to turn over the money that he received for threshing, or earned for threshing.
Q. And anything further?
A. "Well, as near as I can remember if there was anything above that, it was to be turned in on what he owed us at the time.
Q. Was he in debt to you at the time ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Can you say about how much he was in your debt ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. How much?
A. $1,212.15.
Q. And state whether or not this was prior to the time that he began threshing ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Have you had any final settlement with Hanson as yet for the year 1914?
A. No, sir.
And he gave following testimony upon redirect examination:
Q. Where was this talk about you furnishing funds, or this talk with him about the threshing ?
A. In the bank.
Q. And what was said in reference to getting the funds ? what was said between you and Hanson ? and what did Hanson ask you for ?
A. He asked us to take care of him on his labor and other necessary expenses, threshing expenses.
. Q. What did you say to him in reference to that ?
A. Well, I told him we would take care of him under those conditions.
Q. Under what conditions ?
A. That he turn the- money over to us.
Q. And state whether or not that was agreed to ?
The court: Sustained.
Q. And what did he say in reference to that ?
A. He said he would have the parties that he threshed for turn in the money to us.
The witness Hanson, when called for cross-examination under the statute, testified as follows:
Q. Now the bank at Gardner claimed an interest in this money ?
A. Before I started to thresh, you know, I had to have some money to get a start with, and I asked them for money, and he wanted to know how I could fix it up, and I told him who I was going to thresh for, and I would give him an order on the party I was going to thresh for, and if they accepted it—
Q. Was that order in writing?
A. Yes, sir.
The testimony of the witness Hanson would further tend to establish that at the time the arrangement was made with the bank he had an agreement with Moody to do his threshing, but in view of the other facts clearly established, we regard this fact as quite immaterial. The testimony of Hanson, Sterling, and Clark, Moody’s foreman, clearly establishes an arrangement perfected in August whereby all of the money that was earned by Hanson in the operation of his threshing rig should be turned over to the State Bank of Gardner.
Hanson testified as follows:
Q. How much did you owe at the bank before you started this threshing?
A. In the neighborhood of about $1,400.
Q. About $1,400 ?
A. Yes, in August.
Q. And the proceeds of that bill of Sterling’s was to be delivered up to the bank to apply on that debt ?
A. The running expenses was taken out of it and for operating the machine.
Q. How much was turned over to the bank after the running expenses were taken out?
Q. You operated then at a net loss?
A. I had to have some extras and some other bills that had to be paid, —what I got from the machine house.
Q. That doesn’t explain where the money went to.
A. And the same way with store bills that I figured I had incurred during that season, — they had to be taken care of.
Q. You don’t seem to answer by questions; how much money did .Sterling pay to the bank ?
A. He paid all his money to the bank.
Q. How much?
A. I think he paid $150 at one time and $137 at another time.
Q. When did he pay the $137 to the bank ?
A. I think tire latter part of September.
Q. The latter part of September?
A. I think it was.
Q. After these garnishee papers were served ?
A. Yes.
Witness Sterling testified as follows:
A. He agreed to come with the machine at $50 a'day, and I was to pay the machine and teams, or the man and teams.
Q. In other words, you were to pay him $50 a day for himself and machine ?
A. For himself and machine.
Q. The earnings of the machine ?
A. And he was to look after the crew and he was to pay the men and I was to turn the money over to the bank; he asked me if I would turn the money over to the bank to pay for that.
Witness Clark testified as follows:
Q. Was there anything said in reference to the amount of the threshing to be done when you talked with Hanson; I don’t mean in dollars, but—
A. Yes, it was understood that — ■
Q. What was said ? what did he say and what did you say ?
A. I said that I wanted him — wanted Hanson to do the entire threshing on the section and a half of land owned by Moody at Gardner; it
Q. And state whether or not there was any conversation as to how and where the payments were to be made ?
A. (Over objection). That we would pay the State Bank of Gardner as fast as Carter ’phoned and said that the work had been done.
As we view the record it establishes to our satisfaction that an arrangement was made prior to the service of the garnishment summons whereby the garnishees had agreed to pay to the bank whatever money would be earned by Benedict Hanson in threshing for them. In the view we take of the case, it is thus immaterial whether or not the transaction between Hanson and the bank early in July amounted to an assignment conveying to the bank Hanson’s interest in the future earnings of the machine, and the authorities cited by respondent to the effect that the assignment in July was inoperative because amounting to an attempt to assign future earnings on contracts not yet made are inapplicable. We do not question the soundness of respondent’s contention. It is clear that an attempt to assign earnings under contract not yet made would be ineffectual as a transfer of any present interest, but in the light of the transactions in August at the time the contract for the threshing was made, we think the principle contended for is inapplicable in this case. The arrangement between the bank and Hanson did amount to a contract to assign the future earnings, and the subsequent events, viewed either in the light of the prior arrangement or standing alone, did, in our judgment, devest Hanson of all interest in the earnings of the machine. Thereafter the bank could sue in its own right as the beneficiary of this contract or as assignee of Hanson’s right, and this right was fully vested in the garnishment.
(2) This brings us to a consideration of the effect, if any, of § 6706 of the Compiled Laws of 1913 upon the transaction above discussed. The section referred to reads as follows: “An agzreement may be made to create a lien'upon property not yet acquired or not yet in existence by the party agreeing to give the lien. In such case, the lien agreed for attaches from the time when the party agreeing to give it acquires an interest in the thing to the'extent of such interest; provided
Some minor questions are raised by respondent. It is claimed that the acts of Moody and Sterling in depositing the money in the bank to Hanson’s credit were not done in performance of the contractual arrangement between them and Hanson and the bank. In our opinion this fact has no important bearing. The deposit of the money to ITan.■son’s credit might well have been but a convenient mode of accounting for the receipts which were to be subjected to the arrangement made; and furthermore, inasmuch as the surplus over operating expenses was to apply on the indebtedness owing to the bank, Hanson would have had no right to demand any money from the bank until all his indebtedness was paid. This would be true even though the money were •deposited in his name. While some of the money was checked out on Hanson’s checks, there is nothing to show that this was not done in pursuance of the arrangement to first take care of the cost of operation.
It is further contended that the garnishees, by reason of having filed :an affidavit denying liability to Hanson, are precluded from showing the arrangement with the bank. If appellants’ contention as to the facts is correct, the affidavit is true in fact. The garnishees were under no •duty to inform the plaintiff where it might find property belonging toIianson, nor were they under obligation to disclose the evidentiary -matter in support of the claim of nonliability.
For the reasons assigned the judgment of the trial court is reversed, with costs.