25 Mo. App. 78 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs seek to- recover four hundred and sixty-eight dollars, as the price of a car load of flour sold and delivered to the defendant. The answer is a general denial, with an additional defence, setting up that, since the commencement of this suit, B. F. Hobart obtained a judgment in the district court of Crawford county, state of Kansas, against the present plaintiffs, for the same sum which is herein sued for ; that, upon that judgment process of garnishment was served upon these defendants, and such further proceedings were had, that these defendants were afterwards compelled, by order of the said district court, to pay, and did pay, into said court the said sum demanded in garnishment. Wherefore they say that the demand herein sued for
It is a settled rule, founded upon obvious principles-of natural justice, that a garnishee can not lawfully be compelled to pay the same indebtedness twice. If it has happened in a few instances that, in due course of' law, a second payment has been enforced, this was not. due to a failure of the rule, but was because of the-person’s failure to use proper diligence in avoiding the first payment. If, in the first successful proceeding-against him, he has omitted an obvious defence which would have constituted an effectual bar, he can not complain if, in another proceeding, against which no defenceis available, an adverse judgment shall again result. Thus, two payments of one indebtedness maybe brought about by a garnishee’s own default; but not because-both were compellable primarily, as a matter of abstract law. It is equally true, that, if a person be subjected to-two separate proceedings on account of the same indebtedness, and no lawful defence is possible against the first that comes to trial, so that judgment against him is the inevitable result, this will create a conclusive defence again,st the one secondly coming to be heard.
Our supreme court, in Lieber v. St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association (36 Mo. 382), held that “the pendency of a suit against the garnishee, by the defendant in attachment or execution, will not relieve the garnishee from his liability under the garnishment.” This rule, broadly applied, without any reference to diversity of jurisdictions, would determine that the pendency of the present suit-furnished no available defence against the garnishment in Kansas; from which it would follow that the compulsory payment there made created a bar against any recovery in the present case, and that the circuit-
In Wallace v. McConnell (38 U. S. 151), suit was instituted .in the United States district court of Alabama, and, during its pendency attachment proceedings were .begun in an Alabama state court b,y a creditor of the' plaintiff, under which the debt sued on in the federal .court was attached in the defendant’s hands. The .defendant set uji this attachment by a plea puis darreincontinuance in the federal court. The plea was held bad on demurrer, and this ruling was sustained on error. Said the United States Supreme Court:, .“The plea shows that the proceedings on the attachment were instituted after the commencement of this. suit. The jurisdiction of the district court of the United States, and the right of the plaintiff to prosecute his suit in. that court having attached, that right could not be arrested or taken away by any proceedings in another court. This would produce a collision in the jurisdiction of courts, that would .extremely embarrass the administration of justice. If the attachment had been conducted to a conclusion and the money .recovered of. the defendant, before the commencement of the present suit, there can be no doubt that it might have been set •up as a payment upon the note in question. * * * If this doctrine be well founded, the priority of suit will determine the right. The rule must be reciprocal,. ,and where the shit in one court is commenced, prior-tQ;the - institution of proceedings under attachment in another court» such proceedings can not arrest the suit, and the maxim, qui prior est tempore, potior est jure, must, govern the case.” :.
The question thus presented has elicited some contrariety of opinion in different states, but the reasoning which appears to be the most satisfactory and the most nearly in harmony with the views of our supreme court, refuses to admit that a rule, to be applied where the proceedings are all within the same state, can be reversed when the garnishment is in one state, and the pending suit in another. It is considered that due effect is thus given to the constitutional requirement, that full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. This “full faith and credit” implies, not that a judgment rendered in one state may be enforced by execution in another, but that, in so far as a judgment in one state determines the existing relations between the parties thereto, the same relations shall be judicially recognized and upheld, as between the same persons, in.
The supreme court of Illinois, in Allen v. Watt (79 Ill. 284), holds that: “ Where a debt has been recovered from a debtor by garnishee process, under. an attachment proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction in another state, the recovery is a protection, in this state, to the garnishee against his original creditor ; and the fact that the debt may have been put into judgment, does not change the rule.” This ruling puts a stronger light than is needed upon the sufficiency of the present defence, since, when it was offered, the debt had not yet been reduced to judgment. Says the court: “The court of common pleas of Hamilton county, in the state of Ohio, in which these attachment proceedings were had, was, it is not denied, a court of competent jurisdiction of the subject matter, and acquired jurisdiction of the persons of the appellants by service of process upon them, and the judgment of that court is entitled to full faith and credit in this state. This judgment, so rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, has been paid and satisfied by the appellants, and there is no justice in requiring them to pay it a second time. The fact that Watt had recovered a judgment against the appellants, made them no less his debtors when the garnishment process was served on them, and we do not see in what respect it could have benefitted them, had they set this up by plea in the Ohio court. * * * Chief Justice Kent said, in Embree & Collins v. Hanna (5 Johns. 100), that it was a settled and acknowledged principle, in the English courts, that where a debt has been recovered of the debtor, under the process of foreign attachment, the recovery is a protection, in England, to the garnishee against his original creditor, and he may plead it here.”
In Holmes v. Remsen (20 Johns. 229), it was hold
. Jones v. Railroad (1 Grant’s Cases, 459), was a case in which the railroad company .was garnished in a ■Pennsylvania court upon a judgment held by the plaintiff against Inman, who had a judgment in the state of New York against the railroad company. The Pennsylvania supreme court said : £C Inman, therefore, will have no right to raise objections in New York to the deduction from his judgment there against the railroad company of the amount of the plaintiffs judgment against him here, if the railroad corporation should be legally compelled to pay it; and that corporation has no right to complain of this proceeding.”
The. Massachusetts decisions are not all in harmony with the foregoing, nor, indeed, are they consonant with one another. We think, on the whole, that the weight of authority is .largely on the side of an application of the law, as decided by our supreme court in the Lieber ease, whether the garnishment and the common law proceeding are in the same, or in different, states.
The circuit court, therefore, erred in striking out the second defence in the answer, and its judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded. .
delivered a supplemental opinion of .the court.
In view of a possible re-trial it is proper to add that the petition fails to state any cause of action, as it does