40 Ga. App. 150 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
On December 8, 1927, a summons of garnishment based upon a pending suit brought by J. A. Smith against General Sprayer Company was served on Macon National Bank. On March 5, 1928, the bank answered the summons of garnishment, stating that it had no property, money, or effects of General Sprayer Company, and was not indebted to it in any sum, either at or since the time of the service of the summons of garnishment, “except $1456.64 on deposit;” and that “defendant was indebted to garnishee in an amount much larger than the above sum, and garnishee applied the above amount held on deposit against defendant’s debt to it, and therefore it is not indebted, and so answers.” On March 24, 1928, plaintiff traversed the said- answer and averred that “the garnishee was indebted to the defendant when said garnishment was served, and the garnishment is a lien on said money to the extent of $1456.64, superior to any claim of the garnishee.” Plaintiff obtained a judgment for $1803.48 against General Sprayer Company in the main case on January 25, 1929; and on March 23, 1929, the judge, without the intervention of a jury, found the said deposit subject to the garnishment. The garnishee duly excepted to this judgment. Was it error?
The gist of the evidence follows: Plaintiff introduced the execution in the main case. Persons Heath, vice-president of Macon National Bank, sworn for plaintiff, testified that though General Sprayer Company had the said deposit in said bank as a checking-account on December 8, 1927, the bank held the said company’s note for $12,000, dated October 22, 1927, due January 20, 1928, indorsed by C. B. Clay, and secured by $14,065.62 worth of collateral notes taken October 22, 1927, and immediately turned back
Mr. Jackson testified that as credit manager of Cotton States Fertilizer Company on December.8, 1927, it became his duty to collect a large mortgage indebtedness due his company by General Sprayer Company, and that he was thoroughly familiar with the General Sprayer Company “in so far as their receivables were concerned;” that on December 8, 1927, its total assets would not exceed $100,674.71, and that its liabilities amounted to at least $110,-000, and that witness considered it then insolvent; and that he did not know the financial standing of Mr. C. B. Olay. Mr. Kinnett, assistant treasurer of General Sprayer Company, sworn for garnishee, testified that he was familiar with the book values of his company on December 8, 1927, and that he “figured the assets worth about $100,000, and the liabilities at about $113,000 or $114,-000, as shown by the books;” that up to December 8, 1927, $995.05 had been collected on said collateral notes and placed on the account of General Sprayer Company in Macon National Bank. Here the garnishee introduced in evidence the said $12,000 note, dated October 22, 1927, due ninety days from date, indorsed by
Plaintiff in error contends that the judgment finding the said deposit subject to the garnishment was error, because: (1) Said note of October 22, 1927, “created a lien or right against the money of General Sprayer Company in said bank in favor of Macon National Bank, superior to the lien of J. A. Smith.” (2) General Sprayer Company was insolvent, and therefore the bank’s claim to said deposit was superior to that of J. A. Smith under his garnishment proceedings. (3) "By the terms of the note of October 22, 1927, and under the undisputed evidence of the case, the deposits made by General Sprayer Company in the Macon National Bank were collateral securities to the note aforesaid, and were therefore not subject to the process of garnishment.” Exception is also taken to the refusal of the court to allow the witness Heath, after he had testified to the facts bearing upon the insolvency of General Sprayer Company, to state whether he considered General Sprayer Company insolvent at the time of the service of the summons of garnishment. This was not reversible error. The court was trying the case without a jury; the facts tending to show
It appears from the record in this case that the bank’s $12,000 note was indorsed by a man who was never shown to be insolvent, and was secured by collateral notes amounting to $18,600.35, the value of which does not clearly appear. It further appears that said deposit was not actually applied to the bank’s unmatured note until long after the garnishment was served on the bank. It is also true that after the deposit had been applied thereon, the note was paid practically on its due date. It appears quite likely that had the garnishee answered fulfy, and awaited the judgment of the court before attempting to apply the deposit on its note, that note would have been promptly paid in full without application of the deposit on it, and that J. A. Smith could have applied the deposit on his judgment.
•The rights of the parties to this controversy are equitable in their nature, and we do not think that our affirmance of the judgment of the court below violates either the provision quoted from th“ $12,000 note, or section 4349 of the Civil Code (1910), which reads as follows: “If a plaintiff: resides without this State, or is insolvent, the defendant may set oif against him a debt not due, under such equitable terms as may be prescribed by the court.” Furthermore, we are quite sure that the conclusion we have reached is in accord with the garnishment laws of this State.
Judgment affirmed.