145 A. 846 | Pa. | 1929
Argued February 5, 1929.
Plaintiffs, claiming to be creditors of the Northdale Woolen Mills and Schwarz, defendants, issued a writ of foreign attachment seizing certain funds alleged to be due the latter by the Yorkshire Worsted Mills. The garnishee appeared specially for the purpose of quashing or *267
dissolving the writ, as was its right: Turner v. Larkin,
It may be noted that where the record discloses no collectible claim, the writ is properly dissolved (Pasquinelli v. Gross,
The moneys here sought to be seized were commissions payable to defendant under a contract with the garnishee, dated July 1, 1927, extending for six months, with provision for renewal. Under its terms, Schwarz was made "representative and selling agent" of the Yorkshire Woolen Mills. He was to open and conduct an office, with the necessary staff, in New York, paying the ordinary expenses, as well as assuming the liability of pay for salesmen whom he might employ. His compensation was fixed at two per cent of sales made as a result of orders sent by him, and a like payment was stipulated for contracts made with other customers of the garnishee, whom he did not solicit or secure, — in certain instances, however, his recompense was limited to one per cent, — but his commissions were payable whether goods were sold directly by him or without his intervention. An accounting for gross sales to all parties was made to him, and the amounts payable determined on the basis of all consummated transactions. Schwarz opened his office, secured his own employees, and paid the costs incurred. His letterheads showed his place of business to be in four cities, and that he was "manufacturer and commission agent of woolens and worsteds," and a member of "The American Association of Woolen and Worsted Manufacturers." The sign on his office door disclosed that he represented three corporations, the garnishee, the Quinapoxet Mills and the Northdale Woolen Mills; the claim of plaintiff arose as a result of Schwarz's transactions with the corporation last named. It had been agreed with the garnishee that he would give up his business connection with the other companies within six months after the making of the contract of July 1, 1927, and thereafter he severed his relations with them.
The decree now complained of was a refusal to quash or dissolve the attachment of sums due by the Yorkshire *269
Worsted Mills, garnishee, for services performed under its contract with Schwarz. It was claimed that the amount owing represented wages or salary, and therefore could not be seized. The Act of 1845 (P. L. 460, section 5, amending the Act of June 15, 1836, P. L. 755) provides that "the wages of any laborers, or the salary of any person in public or private employment, shall not be liable to attachment in the hands of the employer," a privilege which cannot be waived: Box Board Co. v. Rossiter,
The legislative class intended to be protected by the Act of 1845 has also been the subject of frequent consideration. Whether the compensation be called "wages" or "salary" is immaterial: Com. ex rel. Wolfe v. Butler,
The present case does not come within any of the situations mentioned. Schwarz did not receive goods and resell the same for a share of the price, but solicited only orders which were filled by the manufacturer directly from his mill. He was entitled to pay, under his contract, not only for what he did himself, but for goods sold directly by the garnishee to others without any service performed by him. Further, he received two per cent commission on orders he actually secured through his own employees with whom he made individual arrangements for adequate compensation. In both of the instances mentioned he acquired the right to pay, not for any personal service of his own, but for profit not arising from individual endeavor. As said by the court below: "There appears in the case, the element of profit on the services of others. If this is proven at the trial, then at least that part of the fund due may be attachable, and as we cannot determine, from the evidence submitted, just what part is for wages or salary, as defined by the decisions, as distinguished from profit on the services of others, we cannot quash or dissolve the attachment."
It is clear that the case does not come within the Act of 1845, if the fund is, in whole or part, not recompense payable as the result of personal effort; the statute refers merely to compensation for defendant's manual or mental service: Hamberger v. Marcus, supra; Smith v. Brooke,
It is unnecessary to determine in the present proceeding whether Schwarz is to be treated as a factor or broker, or commission merchant, and comes within the protection afforded by the Act of 1845. As to the two classes first mentioned, it has been suggested the statute has no application (Hamberger v. Marcus, supra, page 139), and that is the contention of the present plaintiff. The effect of the relation of the parties here, and whether the recompense provided by the contract constitutes "wages or salary" need not, however, be now considered, for the attachment cannot be dissolved for the reasons heretofore stated. What may subsequently appear when the facts are fully developed, and whether the recompense is of the character entitled to legislative protection as against attaching creditors, can be then determined.
The order and decree is affirmed at the cost of appellant.