195 A. 609 | Conn. | 1937
The facts stipulated for this reservation include the following: The plaintiff brought a civil action for damages against George A. Quigley wherein, upon the original writ and upon several subsequent orders for further attachment, the defendant was garnisheed. When this garnishee process was served Quigley was the duly elected and qualified mayor of the defendant city, engaged in the performance of his *391 office, and a substantial sum was due to him from the defendant, as provided by ordinance, wholly for salary in administering this office. The defendant made no disclosure. The plaintiff obtained judgment against Quigley for $1846.62 which has not been paid. The mayor is the executive officer of the defendant, charged with the performance of public and governmental duties, essential under the defendant's charter to its discharge of the duties of a public governmental character delegated to it as the agent of the State. The vital question, upon the demurrer and presented upon this reservation, is whether the salary incident to the office of mayor of the city of New Britain is subject to garnishment for the private debts of the incumbent.
In Stillman v. Isham,
In support of this claim the plaintiff argues that it is the established public policy of this State to subject every person's property to the liability of being taken for the payment of his debts, and that this outweighs any impolicy of subjecting public officers in the execution of their public trusts to the inconvenience incident to responsibility to third persons upon garnishee process. The policy of our law of subjecting all property of the debtor, not exempt from execution, to the payment of his debts, is well settled. Gager v. Watson,
The question here, where receipt by the public officer of the salary due him is at stake, goes deeper *393
than that presented by the situation in Stillman v. Isham, supra, as to which, at page 127, we said: "The pervading principle in all these cases is that public officers, who are bound to transact the public business, by certain rules, and in certain forms, shall not be exposed to the expense, the inconvenience and hazard incident to this process." There we were referring to the inconvenience to the officer of having to respond upon such process directed at public moneys in his hands, while here, deprivation of his own salary due him under the law is involved. In view of the probable effect upon his peace of mind, a much greater potential detriment to the public service is threatened by the latter procedure than the former. In such cases the right of garnishment of the officer's salary has been denied for the reason that "the salary of a public officer is a provision made by law for his maintenance and support during his term, to the end that, without anxiety concerning his means of subsistence, he may be able to devote himself entirely to the duties of his office, and the public thus have the full benefit of his knowledge and ability in the services he is entitled to render [and that] if he could be deprived of his means of support by the garnishment of his salary, presumptively his efficiency as an officer would be impaired, if not destroyed, and the public interests would suffer serious detriment." Lewis v. Denver,
The potential serious injury to the public from such impairment of the mayor's efficient discharge of his *394
official duties is apparent upon the facts in this case. The State has delegated to the city of New Britain various attributes of sovereignty by its charter, and thereunder the mayor as chief executive magistrate is charged with the duty of carrying many of them into effect. 14 Special Laws, pp. 915, 927, 24-28. The rights, authority, and duty thus conferred upon him invest him with a portion of the sovereign power of the government to be exercised for the public good by him as a public officer. Sibley v. State,
The Superior Court is advised that the demurrer to the second defense wherein is set forth the facts upon which rested the defendant's claim that the salary was exempt, should be overruled. Costs in this court will be taxed in favor of the defendant as they would be to the prevailing party on an appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.