75 P. 1065 | Or. | 1904
delivered the opinion.
The plaintiff, having recovered a judgment in the justice’s court against the defendant Z. T. Smith, procured an execution to be issued upon it, by virtue of which a notice of garnishment was served upon the Secretary of State, with a view of attaching any sum that might be found due Smith from the State, he being an employé thereof. The secretary moved for a discharge of the garnishment, upon the ground that he is not^amendable thereto, which motion having been allowed, the plaintiff appealed to the circuit court,and,the judgmentof the justice’s court havingbeen affirmed, plaintiff now appeals to this court.
Such being the essential nature and effect of the proceeding, it follows irresistibly that the State is not subject to garnishment without its consent. The purpose of the garnishment is to reach eventually the funds of the State, although the Secretary is the person garnisheed, and the proceeding is therefore adversary to or against the State. We are not without authority elsewhere upon the subject. In Lodor v. Baker, 39 N. J. Law, 49, it was held that, as
It is further suggested that for the purpose of construction we should look into the legislative journals, where it would be found that a law was passed, at the session of the legislative assembly of 1903, making state officers liable to
The judgment of the circuit court will therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.