225 N.W. 9 | Minn. | 1929
Plaintiff procured a judgment against defendant on May 11, 1927, for $4,770. Pearson v. Zacher,
1. It is the claim that the state court had no jurisdiction because of the removal to the federal court. The garnishee says that the *184
state court has no control over the application. This assertion is true only in a limited sense. It must not be understood that the state court has no duty in relation to such application. It is charged with the duty of determining whether the record presented to it shows upon its face that the applicant has a right to the removal. It will not yield its jurisdiction until a legally sufficient record has been presented, and it is its duty in every case to examine the petition and bond. This is necessary for it to "accept" them within the meaning of Judicial Code, § 29, 28 USCA, § 72, 36 St. 1095. This is necessary to judicially inform the state court that its power over the cause has been suspended. The mere filing of a petition and bond for the removal of a suit which is not removable does not work a transfer. The contents of the papers must disclose the right. Kowalski v. C. N.W. Ry. Co.
2. The application papers in this case showed upon their face that they were legally insufficient because they disclosed to the state court that the only matter involved was a garnishment proceeding. Such a proceeding is not an independent suit. It is an auxiliary proceeding. It is a mode of execution. It is a means to satisfy the judgment out of the debtor's property. 3 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) § 3949. It is grafted upon the main suit by statute. It is inseparably connected with the judgment. It is an incidental proceeding in comparison with the main suit. If such proceedings were transferred to the federal court we would have the anomalous *185
situation of that court's engaging in a proceeding to collect a judgment over which it had no jurisdiction. The authorities hold that a garnishment proceeding is not removable. 28 USCA, § 71, note 106, p. 66; Poole v. Thatcherdeft (C. C.) 19 F. 49; Bank v. Turnbull Co. 16 Wall. 190,
3. All the authorities speak of the necessity of the petition's showing its legal sufficiency. 28 USCA, § 72, note 372, p. 519, and note 373, p. 520. St. Anthony Falls W. P. Co. v. King W. I. Bridge Co.
4. The garnishee did not apply to the court to be relieved of the judgment and be permitted to disclose. It merely appealed therefrom. Possibly the legal questions involved were sufficient to excuse the failure to make a disclosure under the circumstances, but if the garnishee had a meritorious claim of no liability it should have promptly sought an opportunity to disclose the truth. It did *186 not. It stood on its claimed legal rights. The statute contemplates that the court may relieve a defaulting garnishee. G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9368.
The special appearance at the time for the garnishee disclosure, like all special appearances, was for a limited purpose only. Haney v. Haney,
Affirmed. *187