Plaintiff-appellant Owens brought a contract action against defendant-respondent Government Employees Insurance Company (“GEICO”) seeking to recover under the uninsured motorists provisions of his insur- *309 anee contract. On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his petition on the basis of the res judicata effect of a prior court order quashing a garnishment plaintiff filed against GEICO as garnishee. We reverse.
Plaintiff sustained injuries when an automobile driven by Linda Stewart struck his motorcycle. At the time of the accident plaintiff was insured by GEICO. The liability insurance contract included protection against uninsured motorists.
Plaintiff filed a tort action against Stewart, seeking $10,000 in damages for his injuries. Plaintiff notified GEICO of the suit. As Stewart failed to answer the petition or appear, the court awarded plaintiff a default judgment.
Plaintiff attempted to satisfy the judgment by bringing a garnishment action against GEICO, his insurer. Contending that Stewart was an uninsured motorist, plaintiff argued that GEICO was transformed into the insurer for Stewart and therefore into the judgment debtor subject to garnishment. GEICO filed an amended motion to quash garnishment on four grounds: (1) GEICO owed no money, duty, or obligation to Stewart, and plaintiff obtained no judgment against GEICO; (2) plaintiff violated terms and conditions of the insurance policy; (3) plaintiffs judgment against Stewart did not constitute a finding or judgment that Stewart was an uninsured motorist; and (4) plaintiff alleged property damage which was not subject to inclusion under the uninsured motorist coverage. The first ground clearly questioned the appropriateness of garnishment as a remedy, while the others went to the merits of the claim.
Both parties also moved for summary judgment in the garnishment action. The trial court did not rule upon the motions for summary judgment. It instead sustained GEICO’s Amended Motion to Quash Garnishment but without giving reasons for the judgment. Plaintiff did not appeal.
Plaintiff then filed a contract action against GEICO, seeking recovery under the uninsured motorists provisions of the insurance policy, and damages and attorney fees for vexatious refusal to pay. The trial court sustained GEICO’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition “on the basis that Plaintiff’s suit is barred by the res judicata effect of the Court’s Order of June 16, 1981” quashing the garnishment. Plaintiff appeals from this judgment.
Plaintiff contends that the order had no res judicata effect since (1) it quashed the garnishment as an improper remedy and it did not reach the merits of plaintiff’s claim against GEICO; and (2) the issue in the garnishment action was GEICO’s liability to the uninsured motorist while in the present action the issue is GEICO’s contract liability to plaintiff.
Garnishment is strictly a statutory
1
proceeding.
Household Finance Corp. v. Seigel-Robert Plating Co.,
The basic aim of the doctrine of res judicata is to end litigation as to the same
*310
subject matter between the same parties.
Peoples-Home Life Insurance Co. v. Haake,
Although the record does not disclose on which of four suggested grounds the trial court sustained GEICO’s Amended Motion to Quash Garnishment, we find that plaintiff proceeded improperly in bringing a garnishment action so that the trial court’s decision was not
necessarily
a determination on the merits. Having proceeded improperly, plaintiff is entitled to pursue a viable remedy.
See Hollipeter v. Stuyvesant Insurance Co.,
Plaintiff may proceed with his contract action against GEICO. Judgment is reversed.
Notes
. Section 525.010, RSMo 1978 provides:
All persons shall be subject to garnishment, on attachment or execution, who are named as garnishees in the writ, or have in their possession goods, moneys or effects of the defendant not actually seized by the officer, and all debtors of the defendant, and such others as the plaintiff or his attorney shall direct to be summoned as garnishees.
