8 Md. 95 | Md. | 1855
delivered the opinion of this court.
The present attachment was laid in the hands of J. J. Graves, the city register, who, at the time, as register, held money due by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to Brashears, the defendant, for his salary as a police officer. The judgment below sustained the attachment, and whether that, decision is correct or not is the question for our consideration.
“It would be a mortifying circumstance to see a member of the legislature rendered unable to pay his sustenance, while attending on its session, because a creditor, who never dealt op the credit of the fund, should, by injunction, detain his compensation, on which he obtained credit with his host.”
In Chialey et al., vs. Brewer & Trustee, 7 Mass. Rep., 259, the treasurer of the county held $21.25, which was due tn Brewer for services rendered by him as a juror. Under a Statute of the State the plaintiffs made an effort to have this money applied to the satisfaction of their claim against Brewer; insisting that the treasurer was to be considere^ as his trustee under the statute. But the court held, that a public officer having money in hand to pay a demand, which one has on him merely as a public officer, cannot, for that cause, be adjudged his trustee. And the court say, “A contrary decision would be mischievous, as will appear from this single consideration: that it would suspend, during the pendency of an action, a possibility of settling the accounts of the officer, who should be summoned as the trustee; and it may be added, that it would unreasonably compel him to attend courts in e'very county in the commonwealth to answer interrogatories.”
In Bulkley vs. Eckert et al. 3 Barr's Penn. Rep., 368, Bulkley had a judgment against Ulp and Eckert, on which
We do not understand the counsel for the appellee as contending that money due to a State officer for services, whilst it remains in the custody of a fiscal agent or officer of the State, can be attached. If the law will not permit it to be done in such a case, what good reason is there in support of such a principle, which does not also apply with perfect propriety to
As municipal corporations are parts of the State government exercising delegated political powers, for public purposes, the rule which prevents an attachment from being levied upon a claim of one State officer on funds in the hands of another, applicable to its payment, must apply with equal force to a case like the present. If an argument against the right to attach, based upon inconvenience, can have an influence in any case, it surely should do so where the officers of a large city are, necessarily, very numerous.
The appellee’s counsel, however, contends that the attach-
The argument from inconvenience, which, exclusive of the act, prohibits or denies fhe right of attachment, we think will sanction the construction that the legislature did not design to include municipal corporations. Although the language of the law of Kentucky, which was under consideration in Divine vs. Harvie, is very general and comprehensive, yet its general terms were not considered sufficient to entitle a creditor of an officer or employee of the State 1o demand payment of his claim out of a sum of money allowed the employee in the ordinary appropriation bill. There the public inconvenience exerted considerable influence upon the decision.
In Chialey, et al., vs. Brewer & Trustee, the court were called on to construe a statute under which the plaintiffs sought to enforce the payment of their claim against Brewer, by demanding payment of the county treasurer out of money in his hands due to Brewer as a juror. There the injury to the public arising from sustaining such a proceeding is referred to as worthy of much consideration by the court in giving an interpretation to the statute.
In Pennsylvania the law relative to domestic attachments, passed in 1807, by its 2nd section, provides, that the officer to whom the process is directed “ shall attach all the lands, goods, chattels and effects of the defendant or defendants, in whose hands soever the same can be found.” And the act passed in 1836, on the same subject, prescribes the form of the writ; in which command is given to the sheriff to attach all and singular the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of the
In Hawthorn vs. City of St. Louis, 11 Missouri Rep., 59, it was decided that under the provisions of the statute of that State, to be found in the Revised Code, of 1835, page 254, a public municipal corporation could not be summoned as garnishee, on account of a sum due to an officer of the corporation, as part of his salary, although it had been held that private corporations might be ‘'‘'proceeded against by garnishment.” Hawthorn caused the city of St. Louis to be summoned as garnishee of Clark, who was recorder of the city, the plaintiff being an execution creditor of Clark, to whom the city owed a balance on account of his salary. Because the city was “a public municipal corporation, created for the public benefit,” the court held it not to be subject to the rales governing private corporations, such as banks, insurance companies, and other similar corporations. They then say: “Tt should not, therefore, be compelled to stand at the bar of oil the courts in the State and participate in the judicial controversies carried on between debtors and creditors. Whilst these contests would be going on the public interest would, suffer, by abstracting
Neither in the Massachusetts or the Pennsylvania case are the officers held to be excluded from the operation of their attachment laws, because those laws are considered as having reference to persons as individuals, and not to corporations. And in the Missouri decision the liability of private corporations is distinctly recognized. In all those cases we find the exemption of officers from attachments placed upon considerations of public policy, having in view the necessity of preventing serious impediments to the prompt and efficient discharge of official duties; just such considerations as should exclude the present parties from the operation of the act of 1825, by construing its language as not including corporations of a public municipal character.
The counsel for appellee says, that under the city charter the defendant, Brashears, could have sued the corporation for his claim, if his salary had been improperly withheld: and being a claim for which he had a right of action, it was a credit subject to attachment. Admitting, however, that Bra-shears might have maintained an action against the corporation, still the right of the appellee to attach the claim is not relieved from the objection to it, based upon considerations of public policy. Because a claimant may sue, it does not follow that his creditor can attach the claim in every case, although as a general rule it may be so. There is no intimation in the Pennsylvania case that the school teacher could not have sued the treasurer of the board of school directors. And although in Hawthorn vs. The City of St. Louis the liability of the city to be summoned as garnishee was denied, yet there can be no doubt that Clark, the recorder, had a right to sue the corporation for the amount of his salary then due. That this is true may be seen by reference to the decision in. Carr vs. The
Under the belief that the claim of Brash ears was not liable to attachment, we must reverse the judgment below.
Judgment reversed and, 7ioprocedendo ordered.