ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
- Great Southwest Fire Insurance Company (the Garnishee) raises several questions concerning our earlier opinion, which appeared as Koors v. Great Southwest Fire Ins. Co. (1988), Ind.App.,
We thought it obvious that we had disposed of all the issues raised by the parties. We did not address the proceedings supplemental because the result there was rendered moot by the reversal of the underlying case against Donald E. Hedrick (Hedrick) and the other named defendants. The Garnishee, however, asserts that the decision of the trial court in the proceedings supplemental continues to have validity irrespective of the reversal of the underlying case, citing no authority. Under the current trial rules, proceedings supplemental are merely a continuation of the underlying claim on the merits. Ind. Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 69(E).
Previously this court has stressed the importance of a valid final judgment upon which the court may enter an order of garnishment in proceedings supplemental. Most often, we have discussed this issue in the context of a collateral attack on the underlying judgment; it is well established that the proceedings supplemental cannot be used to collaterally attack the underlying judgment. See De Later v. Hudak (1980), Ind.App.,
Here, however, we consider the problem of the continuing validity of a proceedings supplemental which was based on an underlying judgment that has now been overturned. It is plain that with the reversal of the underlying judgment, the basic requirement of TR. 69(E)(1), that the plaintiff own a judgment against the defendant, is not satisfied. Further, by attacking the underlying judgment, Hedrick has followed the method prescribed by our opinions in
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De Later and North. Hedrick has done everything necessary to preserve his claims of error concerning the underlying judgment and it is only reasonable that any proceedings supplemental based thereon has been rendered a nullity by the reversal of the underlying claim. See, e.g., Lesh v. Davison (1914),
In a related argument, the Garnishee appears to contend that the favorable judgment it received in proceedings supplemental will have claim precluding effect in any future proceedings supplemental. It is apparent, however, that a judgment which has been reversed on its merits cannot have any claim precluding effect. See 50 C.J.S. Judgments § 702 (1947). The Garnishee's situation here is analogous to that of the insurer in Simpson v. Motorist Mutual Ins. Co. (7th Cir.1974),
The petition for rehearing is denied.
