55 S.E.2d 825 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
The wages of persons who reside out of this State and which have been earned wholly without this State are subject to garnishment in this State though the case be not one brought by writ of attachment.
Phil H. Coleman, the defendant in the divorce and alimony case, voluntarily submitted himself to the jurisdiction of Fulton Superior Court by acknowledging service, waiving process, and by consenting to the rendition of a judgment by the court against him and obligating him to pay a stated amount of alimony for his wife and for the support of his minor children. That consent judgment conferred jurisdiction of the defendant upon the Superior Court of Fulton County. "1. One named as a defendant in an action may legally appear therein by filing with the record a specific statement in writing signed by him, waiving service, and specifying that he enters his appearance in the case. 2. Such an appearance by the defendant in a case pending in a court of a foreign State, which has jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the suit, is sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of his person, and authorize it to render a general judgment against him, although he may have been in the State of his residence at the time of signing the entry of appearance." Epps Leabow v.Buckmaster,
In Harvey v. Thompson,
If it be conceded that the situs of the debt owing the defendant by the garnishee be elsewhere than in the State of Georgia for all other purposes, we think that the fact that personal service and appearance and pleading by the defendant was had in the divorce case, established the situs of that debt in Georgia insofar as the power of a court of this State to enforce its collection, and that the garnishee cannot be heard to say that the funds in its hands are not available to the courts of this State for the purpose of enforcing a judgment rendered by one such court, where jurisdiction of both parties was had by the court, and a judgment against the principal defendant was entered with his consent. As to this point the ruling in Baxter Co.
v. Andrews,
For these reasons, and in view of the authorities cited, we hold that the court did not err in sustaining the motion to strike and in sustaining the traverse of the plaintiff to the answer of the garnishee, and in entering judgment against the garnishee.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton, C. J., and Felton, J., concur. *230