46 Mo. App. 644 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This is a garnishment under execution. On the trial the jury found that the garnishees were indebted to the defendant in the execution in the sum of $785.65. The amount due the plaintiff under the execution was $518.60, and this, the court ordered the garnishees to pay into court. They failed to do this, and thereupon the court entered a judgment against them for that amount. From that judgment they have appealed.
The counterpart of this proceeding was before this court once before. Spengler v. Kaufman, 43 Mo. App. 5. In the opinion in that case the reply and denial are set forth, and a full statement made of the facts and circumstances out of which the litigation arose. The present garnishment is based on a subsequent execution issued upon the same judgment, but the proceedings at the trial were substantially the same as in the former case. Whatever matters of difference there were will be now noticed.
In the former opinion we held that the plaintiff ’ s denial was not broad enough to squarely put in issue the good faith of the agreement between the defendant in the execution and the garnishees, under which the wages of the defendant were to be paid in advance. In
“And plaintiff avers, and states the fact to be, that she is the wife of said defendant, Lonis P. Spengler; that she was married to said Spengler in the month of October, 1887; that in the month of January, A. D. 1888, said defendant Spengler deserted and abandoned this plaintiff and refused to live with or support her, and since said time has refused to live with or support her, and has not lived with, or contributed to the support of, this plaintiff from the time of said abandonment until the present time; that in the month of December, 1888, in this court, she obtained judgment against said defendant, Louis P. Spengler, for her support and maintenance; that, by said judgment against said defendant, Louis P. Spengler, it was adjudged and decreed that said Spengler pay to this plaintiff as and for her support and maintenance the sum of $25 per month, the first payment of $25 to be due and payable under said judgment on the fifteenth day of December, 1888, and a like sum of $25 to be due and payable thereunder on the fifteenth of each and every month thereafter; that said Spengler has paid nothing under or on account of said judgment; that said defendant, Louis P. Spengler, is, and ever since the first day of February, A. D. 1889, has been, in the employment of said garnishee as bookkeeper and collector at a salary of $75 per month; that in the month of April, 1889, under an execution issued from this court in her favor and against said defendant, Louis P. Spengler, under the judgment aforesaid, she caused a process of garnishment returnable to the Juné term, 1889, of this court to be served upon said garnishee, and has caused garnishments to be served upon said garnishee, under executions issued under said judgment, returnable to each term of this court, between said June term, 1889, and the term of court to which the garnishment herein is
One of the defenses in the first proceeding, and upon which the garnishees now insist, was, that the contract provided for the monthly payment of the salary in advance ; that they had complied therewith, and that they were not indebted to the defendant for wages in any amount subject to garnishment for the reason that he was the head of a family. This defense involves the right of Spengler to claim his statutory exemptions where his wife is seeking to enforce a judgment against him for her maintenance.
■ In the first case we declined to pass on the question, because there was no evidence that the defendant was the head of a family, other than as the husband of the plaintiff. In the present proceeding the garnishees offered proof to the effect that the defendant, his widowed mother, and unmarried sisters were living together, and that the wages of the defendant were applied to, and constituted the only means of, their support. The court excluded this evidence, and upon this ruling of the court is based the appellants’ first assignment of error.
I. Our statute (R. S. 1889, sec. 5220) exempts certain persons from liability as garnishees. The section referred to contains the following clause : “Nor shall any person be charged as garnishee on account of wages due from him to a defendant in his employ for the last thirty days’ service, provided such employe is the head of a family, and a resident of this state.”
It is the settled law of this state that the relation of husband and wife, or father and child, need not exist to constitute a family, or to constitute the managing and responsible person of a household, the head of a family, within the meaning of our exemption laws.
But in these cases, as well as others which we have examined, the contests were between ordinary debtors and the householder or head of the family. Here we have a different case. The plaintiff seeks by legal process to compel her husband to support her, as he is legally bound to do. If the appellant’s construction of the statute is to prevail, then its enforcement against the plaintiff becomes the means of oppression, rather than of protection. This would entirely subvert the law, and defeat the intention of the legislature. The defendant’s obligation to support his mother and sisters is a moral one only, and he is to be commended for so doing; but his obligation to support his wife rests on legal, as well as moral, grounds, which we think makes the obligation a paramount one. As to ordinary creditors the statute would .protect the fund for the benefit of the mother and sisters, but not as to the claims of the wife for maintenance. It would be very strange, indeed, if the defendant could shield himself under the exemption statute, when his wife was seeking to compel him to support her, to secure which was one of the chief objects of the law. W e will rule this assignment against the appellants.
It must be conceded that the instruction presented the issue to the jury in a way quite favorable to the appellants, possibly more so than the law warranted. It will be observed that the jurors were told that knowledge by the defendants of a fraudulent purpose by Spengler was not sufficient, but that, to render them liable for the money paid, the jury must find that they entered into the agreement for the purpose of aiding Spengler.in his fraudulent designs.
The evidence leaves no doubt concerning the purpose of Spengler. His sole object was to defeat the enforcement of the plaintiff’s judgment. Nor can it be said that the defendants were not fully advised of this purpose. Therefore, the only question is, was there any substantial evidence that the defendants participated in the fraud. The plaintiff introduced Kaufman as a witness. He knew nothing personally about the making.
The following are the salient facts as disclosed 'by the record: That Wilkinson and Spengler had been close friends for many years ; that, at Spengler’s marriage, Wilkinson acted as groomsman ; that, in February, 1889, Spengler was employed by the appellants, who were then in the lumber trade, to keep their books at a monthly salary of $75 ; that, at the time, Spengler and his wife were living apart, and her suit for maintenance was then pending ; that, in April, 1889, an execution was issued on the plaintiff’s judgment in the suit for maintenance and the appellants were summoned as garnishees ; that, when the first garnishment was served, Wilkinson told Spengler “that he did not like this garnishment business and that he must protect himself;’ ’
Now upon this state of facts a jury of ordinary intelligence might have reasoned in this way: That, if Wilkinson had not been controlled by a feeling of friendship for Spengler, and a desire to aid him in defeating the enforcement of the plaintiff’s judgment, common business prudence would have suggested to him that it was better to discharge Spengler, however valuable his services might have been, or whatever might have been the condition of the firm’s business, rather than involve his firm in costly litigation. And to strengthen this position the jurors might have argued that, at the time when Spengler’s salary was Increased, the appellants, if they had had only their own interest^ in view, would have insisted that this increase should be paid to the plaintiff, thereby relieving themselves of other garnishments. Or the jurors might have considered the statement made by Wilkinson to Spengler to the effect, that Spengler must protect himself against the garnishment, as a suggestion that he, Wilkinson, was ready to aid him in doing so. Such a line of thought or process of reasoning could not, in our opinion, be said to rest solely on conjecture or suspicion. It finds some warrant in the circumstances of the case. We will, therefore, rule this assignment likewise against the appellants.
III. Objection is made to the plaintiff’s first instruction. If wc rightly understand the nature and