1 Indian Terr. 288 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1896
(after stating the facts.) The deposit of money by appellant in the bank raised between them the relation of debtor and creditor. The first question presented by this record is as to the situs of the debt thus created. If such situs was within the territorial limits of the commissioner’s court, such court, by the proceeding in garnishment, inquired jurisdiction. If such situs was elsewhere, the com-nissioner’s court did not acquire jurisdiction, arid the judg-nent therein pleaded by appellee is a nullity, and payment hereon creates no defense in this action. The endeavor to ix in cases like the present the situs of a debt due by a •esident of one jurisdiction to the resident of another has )een fruitful of controversy and of differences of judicial jpinion. The weight of authority favors the view that for rurposes of attachment, as well as for many other purposes,
We think that, to the rule as above stated, there must be recognized an exception in the case of a debtor residing in the state of process, and whose debt is, either by contract or by implication of law, payable therein. A debt is an intangible thing, and, in strictness of speech, is incapable of having a situs at all. The determination of jurisdictional questions has compelled the courts to ascribe to it a local habitation. The legal title and right to the debt being in the creditor, pj analogy to the principle that constructive possession is with the rightful owner, the situs of the debt, as we have seen by probably a majority of the courts, is held to
Considerations of policy support the exception. The states of this Union are frequently separated by invisible lines, but they are'united by closest ties of business inter
The court did not err in finding that the garnishment proceeding was an action in rem, that the debt was payable at the bank, and that the commissioner’s court had jurisdiction. Cooper vs Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308.
2. The court did not err in its second conclusion of
3. We have considered the questions heretofore discussed as they arise upon the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Various errors are assigned predicated upon the rulings of the trial court in the admission of testimony. Some of the objections to the evidence admitted are, as the record is presented to us, well taken. The bill of exceptions contains some of the evidence, but it does not show that it contains all the testimony adduced at the trial. In the absence of such showing, we cannot know that errors in admitting testimony were not cured by the introduction of other testimony, which made that objected to competent, or which rendered its admission harmless by establishing the facts sought to be established by the incompetent testimony. In McKinney vs Demby, 44 Ark. 76, the Supreme Court of Arkansas, upon the question that the court’s instruction was not supported by evidence, announced the rule as follows: “This objection fails, because we must presume that there was such testimony, or else the instruction would not have been given. In the absence of a showing that there was no other testimony heard at the trial, every intendment is indulged in favor of the action of the trial court; and this court will presume that every fact susceptible of proof that
Under the rule of this court, it is not necessary to bring up all the evidence introduced at the trial to secure a review of the court’s action in the admission of particular matters of testimony. It is sufficient to bring up such a statement as will clearly present to this court the very point involved. To do this, it must appear from the bill of exceptions that no other evidence bearing upon the question was introduced than.that shown therein. '
. The record not containing reversible error, the judgment is affirmed.