Plaintiff got judgment for $6,599.39 on January 20, 1954, against defendant, Frank E. Smith, individually and trading as O’Hara Fish Co.
Beatrice Smith , had a bank account in the Broad Street Trust Company. On September. 21, 1951, she signed a card, a power of attorney, whereby her husband, Frank E. Smith, was enabled to use the account without caution or hindrance or exception. And he did. He could sign checks in the form “Beatrice Smith, Frank Smith, Atty.;” also he could sign checks on the account without adding the word “attorney”. The admitted errant purpose of the power, of attorney was to enable Mr. Smith to carry on his business; he was in financial difficulties, had judgments against him and did not carry a bank account in his own name. Such bank account would be a quick subject of a creditor’s satisfaction. After the execution of the power of. attorney, Beatrice Smith never used the account; it was used exclusively by her husband, who deposited his own moneys therein and withdrew them by checks signed, “Beatrice Smith, Frank Smith, Atty”. The account was finally closed out April 20, 1955.
On January 20, 1954,. the date the attachment issued, there was $3,968.71 in the account, and on January 23, 1954, the date of service of' the attachment on Beatrice Smith, the balance was $1.39, the difference of $3,967.32 having been withdrawn in the interim. Thereafter, from. January-26, 1954, to December 2, 1954, a total of $57,034,97 was deposited in the-account and from January 23, 1954* to April 20, 1955, $57,036.36 was withdrawn, which closed out the account.
On this record, plaintiff essays judgment against Beatrice Smith as garnishee for the -full amount of the judgment against her husand, $6,599.39. There was only $1.39 in the account at the time plaintiff’s
Mrs. Smith, garnishee, asserts she had no funds of defendant-husband in her hands at the time of service of the attachment upon her or subsequently, that the account was actually that of her husband, it represented his deposits and withdrawals only, and could therefore be reached only through an execution against him with the bank as garnishee.'
Though defendant could have shown that the money
The sanction may appear drastic, giving plaintiff a judgment against Mrs. Smith because she gave authority to her husband to use her account. But avoidance lay within easy reach; all she needed to do was revoke the power of attorney and withdraw Mr. Smith’s right to use the account.
It may be that plaintiff had a choice of other procedures here, but this does not render futile what it did here. Prior to the Banking Code of May 15, 1933, P. L. 624, sec. 905, 7 PS §819-905, plaintiff could have attached the account by executing against Frank E. Smith, describing him also under the alias name of “Beatrice Smith, Frank Smith, Atty.,” and named the bank as garnishee. Now an appropriate method appears to be by complaint in equity against Mrs. Smith and the bank, asserting real ownership in defendant of the account in the other name and requesting a restraining order. See discussion in Goodrich-Amram, secs. 3103-7 and 3103-8, on attachment execution.
As to the account here garnished, it was one of which the garnishee had knowledge. It was originally her account and continued so with her signature card and her signed power of attorney to defendant. Though the money was actually his, the potential custody she possessed was sufficient to requiré her to respect the attachment and freeze the fund.
This is, of course, not an attempt to reach defendant’s funds on the theory they were fraudulently transferred to his wife; if that were the situation, another procedure would be appropriate. But here Mrs. Smith’s relationship to the account does make her liable as garnishee.
Finding
I find for plaintiff, Liberty Fish Co., against Beatrice Smith, also known as. Beatrice S. Smith,. garnishee, in the sum of $6,599.39.
Plaintiff sought judgment against Beatrice Smith, garnishee here, as a partner in O’Hara Fish Co., but after trial, before Judge Reimel on March 15, 1956, a verdict was rendered in her favor.
In foreign attachment, the rule is otherwise. The attachment falls if there is no property in the hands of the garnishee at the time of service of the attachment: Falk & Co. v. So. Texas Cotton Oil Co., 368 Pa. 199; Atkins v. Canadian SKF Co., 353 Pa. 312. Pa. R. C. P. No. 3106, effective October 1, 1954, after the attachment in this case was served, made a change, not material here; after-acquired property up to the time of judgment is bound and not merely to the time of the trial as before: Frazier v. Berg, 306 Pa. 317, 325.
The status of the bank as garnishee is not here in question; the issue before me is that -between plaintiff and Beatrice Smith as garnishee.
“In the case of a debt due to the defendant, or of a deposit of money made by him, or of goods or chattels pawned, pledged, or demised, as aforesaid, the same may be attached and levied in satisfaction of the judgment, in the manner allowed in the case of a foreign attachment-.
Mr. Smith opened another account in the same bank, on October 4, 1954, signing and using his wife’s name, in a substantially similar way. This was' without her knowledge, and she had no duty with respect to that account. Her signature or consent was never obtained, and plaintiff séeks no judgment against her as garnishee as to this account.
