The motion to dismiss the appeal seems to be founded on the theory, that the judgment discharging the appellee as garnishee, is not a final judgment which will support an appeal. The statutes creating the remedy by garnishment declare that “an appeal lies to the Supreme Court at the instance of the plaintiff, the defendant, the contestant, or claimant.” Code of 1886, § 2990. The character of the judgment for or against either of the parties, from which the ap
The statute is in terms imperative and prohibitory, that, “No person shall answer on behalf of any corporation, any process of garnishment, unless he shall make affidavit that he is the duly authorized agent of the corporation to make such answer.” — Code of 1886, § 2975. The history of the statute aids materially in its true interpretation and construction. Under the preexisting statutes, for a long period, grave doubts were
In D., C. & N. O. R. Co. v. Crass,
It is argued that at a term subsequent to the filing of the paper, the appellee adopted it as an answer to the garnishment, ratifying the act of Cameron in making it; and the adoption and ratification is the equivalent of a precedent authorization. As a general rule, it is true that ratification by the principal of the unauthorized act of one professing to be his agent, is the equivalent of a precedent authority, and has relation to the doing of the act; this is especially true as between the principal and agent, but it is not true as to strangers having interven
The statute, and in this respect it is but an embodiment or concise aggregation of pre-existing statutes and the judicial construction they had received, authorizes a plaintiff to contest the answer of a garnishee at the term at which it is made. — Code of 1886, § 2981. If the contest be not then inaugurated, and there be not by order of the court an extension of the time, the garnishee is entitled to be discharged, and though there may be a general continuance of the cause, is’not compellable to join in a contest of the answer at a subsequent term. Graves v. Cooper,
A plaintiff is entitled to a conditional judgment against a garnishee, duly served with the process, failing to appear and answer at the return term of the process. Code of 1886, § 2985. But if the plaintiff fail to take such judgment, it has long been settled, the garnishment is not discontinued ; the forbearance of the plaintiff in this respect -works no injury to the garnishee. The garnishment is a suit in which the garnishee stands in the relation of a defendant, and if he does not. appear and make answer, he is in the condition of a defendant in any other suit, against-whom the plaintiff would be entitled to a judgment by default; if the plaintiff forbear to take the judgment, he is not the less entitled to it at a subsequent term.—Robinson v. Starr,
We have considered all the questions suggested in
For the errors the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
