99 Mo. App. 474 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
It appears from the record in this case that Adams — the respondent here — entered into a contract with Matthews & Matthews and Barrow, who were attorneys, whereby they agreed to bring and prosecute an action for him against the Kansas & Texas Coal Company — hereafter referred to as the coal company — to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him on account of the negligence of said coal company, and that they were to receive as a compensationtion for their services forty per cent of whatever amount they succeeded in recovering. Accordingly, the action was brought and on April 19, 1899, a judgment for five hundred dollars was recovered. On May 1, 1899, Adams made a formal assignment of the judgment on the margin of the record thereof to his attorneys, the two Matthews and Barrow. On April 26, 1899, Milam & Miller, appellants, caused the coal company to be garnisheed on an execution which had been issued on a judgment recovered by them before a justice of the peace against Adams. On December 13,1900, a judgment was giyen by the justice against the garnishee coal company, from which it took an appeal. About
On January 17, 1901, pursuant to notice, the defendants appeared before the judge of the circuit court during vacation and upon the hearing of the petition a temporary - injunction was awarded. Each of the defendants filed an interplea.
The defendants Milam & Miller in their separate interplea alleged (1) that'they recovered a judgment before a justice of the peace against Adams for $92, and that on April 18, 1899, they caused an execution to
In the interplea and motion to dissolve filed by the two Matthews and Barrow, they alleged the facts to be as stated by us at the outset in respect to their contract with Adams for the bringing and prosecution of the suit against the coal company, and the payment of the forty per cent of the amount recovered; the subsequent assignment of the judgment to them, and that they were the rightful legal holders of the said judgment. It was also therein further alleged that after the payment of the amount due them under said contract of/ assignment that the balance remaining would be due defendant Adams. It was also therein still further alleged that the said garnishment proceedings against the coal company in the justice’s judgment was void and inoperative.
The court heard the proof offered under the various issues made by the pleadings in the interplea proceedings and found “that the summons to garnishee was issued April 25, 1899, and attempted to be served April 25, 1899; that the attempted execution upon which attempted garnishment was supposed to be bottomed was issued May 8, 1899. The court further finds that said attempted garnishment proceedings were not legally instituted or served and that no judgment against the Kansas & Texas Coal Company could be had upon the said garnishment proceedings. The court further finds that Matthews, Matthews & Barrow had a just lien upon the judgment of Adams against the Kansas & Texas Coal Company for their fee iñ prosecuting suit. The court further finds that Joshua A. Adams is the head of a family and that he claims said balance of judgment under the exemption laws in such cases made and provided by law, and that he is rightly entitled to same and that the same is exempt from execution. It is further adjudged by the court that Milam & Miller take nothing by their interplea, ’ ’ etc.
If the garnishment proceedings on the execution in favor of Milam & Miller against Adams were so irregular as to be insufficient to bring the res, the debt of record, into court so as to authorize a judgment against the garnishee, the coal company, then they, Milam & Miller, have no locus standi — no right to call in question the validity of the assignment of the judgment. If there was no constructive seizure of the credit
“A. E. Riley, Constable.”
The statute (sub. 5, sec. 388, R. S. 1899), in relation to the manner of serving writs of attachment provides that “when the credits of the defendant are to be attached, the officer shall declare to the debtor of the’ defendant that he attaches in his hands all debts due from him to the defendant, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to satisfy the debt, . . . and summon such debtor as garnishee.” And the service of a garnishment under an execution is the same as that under an attachment. Sec. 3434, R. S. 1899. It does not appear from the return of the constable just referred to that he made the declaration to the garnishee required by the statute just quoted. This statutable declaration of sequestration to the garnishee takes the place of manual seizure on account of’ the intangibility of the cerdits there referred to. It constitutes constructive seizure of the credits. The return fails to show that the constable made the declaration required by the said statutory provision which was essential to bind, in the hands of the garnishee, credits of the execution defendant. It was wholly insufficient to bring the res into court so as to authorize a judgment against the garnishee. On the face of the return the court acquired no jurisdiction of the res. Grocer Co. v. Carlson, 67 Mo. App. 179; Hackett v. Gihl 63 Mo. App. 447; Dunn
But it is contended that the constable’s return on the execution makes the declaration required by the statute and that this conferred the requisite jurisdiction for the court to proceed to condemn the res-. The return on the writ of execution and not on the notice of garnishment is the proper place for the return of the constable. If a constable to whom an execution is intrusted for service makes two returns, as here, one on the execution showing a valid and sufficient garnishment, and another on the notice to the garnishee showing an invalid and insufficient garnishment, the former will control. It has been held that where there are two returns where the converse of what has just been stated is the fact, that the defective return in the execution can not be helped or validated by the return indorsed on the notice of garnishment. Todd v. Railway, 33 Mo. App. 110; Hackett v. Gild, supra. And from this we think it must follow that the return on the execution showing that the garnishee was notified by the constable in the manner required by the statute can not be overthrown or displaced by showing what purports to be a copy of the notice of garnishment and the return thereon indorsed by the constable. The return on the execution being regular and complete on its face is not open to collateral attack. The return on the writ, we must think, was sufficient to confer upon the court jurisdiction of the res.
But it is urged that the writ itself was void. The statute (sec. 4037, R. S. 1899) requires that “before any execution shall be delivered the justice shall state on his docket and also on the back of the execution an account of the debt, damages and costs, and of the fees due to each person, and the rate of interest on the judgment, separately.” The docket of the justice who issued the execution now in question does not show the statement
The service of the notice of garnishment was doubtless sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the person of the garnishee, but the question here is one of jurisdiction over the debt to which that over the personismerely incidental. In a case of this kind jurisdiction over the person and debt is inseparable. Norvell v. Porter, 62 Mo. 309, Huffman v. Sisk, ante. If the execution was void there could.be no effective service of it. If it attached nothing in the hands of the garnishee, nothing done by him could affect the rights of others. Gates v. Tuesten, 89 Mo. 13 (1. c. 21, 22), 'and authorities there cited. It is our conclusion that the justice was without jurisdiction to order the garnishee, the coal company, to pay the execution of Milam & Miller against Adams.
As the judgment of the justice against the garnishee coal company was rendered without jurisdiction, and as Milam & Miller acquired by their -garnishment proceeding no lien on or right to have any part of the debt due by the coal company to Adams applied to the
We think the decree was proper and should accordingly be affirmed, and it is so ordered.