253 S.W. 650 | Tex. App. | 1923
In a suit by Edd Nolan against W. M. Meeks for debt, in the sum of $782.82, plaintiff applied for a writ of garnishment directed against the Oklahoma Petroleum Gasoline Company, garnishee. The latter company answered as follows, omitting heading and conclusion:
"(1) That on the date said writ of garnishment was served on it, the Oklahoma Petroleum Gasoline Company had in its possession and under its control no goods, chattels, moneys or effects of any nature whatsoever owing or belonging to the above named defendant.
"(2) That it has no knowledge of any other person being indebted to said defendant."
Upon the trial of the case of Nolan v. Meeks, plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant for $700, with interest, attorney's fees, and costs. Thereafter the court entered judgment against the garnishee for the amount of the judgment entered against the defendant, on the ground that the answer did not comply with the requirement of the statutes, and did not answer under oath all of the questions propounded in the writ of garnishment, and upon the ground that the answer filed was evasive. From this judgment, the garnishee has appealed.
Article 276, Rev.Civ.Statutes, offers a form of writ to be used, which form was used in the instant case. In this form the garnishee is required —
"to answer upon oath what, if anything, he is indebted to the said C. D. [the defendant], and was when the writ was served upon him, and what effects, if any, of said C. D. he has in his possession, and had when this writ was served, and what other persons, if any, within his knowledge, are indebted to the said C. D., or have effects belonging to him in their possession."
The answer filed by the garnishee did not specifically deny that it had, at the time the answer was filed, or between the time the writ was served on it and the filing of the answer, any effects of the defendant in its possession, or was at such time indebted to the defendant in any sum. Nor did it deny that it knew of any one else having effects belonging to defendant.
It is held that an answer which does not include a denial of all the matters inquired about in the writ is evasive, and that under such an evasive answer the trial court is authorized to render judgment against the garnishee for the full amount of the recovery awarded against the defendant. Freeman v. Miller,
If an evasive or defective answer is filed by the garnishee, judgment may be entered against him by the court without striking out *651
the answer. Such answer gives the trial court jurisdiction over the person of the garnishee even though, as in the instant case, the garnishee is a nonresident of the county or state where the suit is pending. Hardware Co. v. Texas Cotton Compress Co. (Tex. Civ. App.)
Under articles 282 and 283 of the statutes in force prior to 1921, the law provided that where the garnishee resided in the county where the proceeding was pending and failed to answer, that the trial court, at any time after judgment in the main case against the defendant, might render judgment against the garnishee for the full amount of such judgment theretofore rendered against the defendant. But when the garnishee resided out of the county, a writ should be issued to the county of garnishee's residence, requiring him to answer the writ of garnishment, and upon return of the certificate and the failure or refusal of the garnishee to answer, judgment could be entered against him. But owing to the fact that the garnishee submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the trial court in the present instance by filing its answer, and the further fact that by the Acts of the 37th Legislature, 1921, c. 105, articles 283 and 292, were repealed, and article 282 was amended (see 1922 Supp. art. 282), and under said article as amended it is provided that no distinction shall obtain between the proceedings against resident and nonresident garnishees, the judgment awarded by the trial court against the garnishee cannot be successfully attacked on this ground. It might be contended were there no answer filed in this case that under the Pennoyer v. Neff Case,
All assignments are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.