42 Minn. 112 | Minn. | 1889
This is a proceeding in garnishment, the debtor defendant appealing from the judgment of the court below against the garnishee defendant. The point made by appellant is that the debt reached by the garnishment, being for wages due the appellant, was exempt, under Gen. St. 1878, c. 66, § 310, subdiv. 11, as amended by Laws 1879, c. 5. After the court below had filed its decision, directing judgment for the plaintiff, the appellant requested it to find whether, at the times covered by the garnishment, the appellant was a laboring man, within the meaning of subdivision 11, and thereupon the court found as a fact that he was. The appellant claims that that finding is conclusive upon the point. There are two reasons why it is not so: First. That the statute regulating garnishments, as it allows judgment against the garnishee, on the disclosure alone, only when the full disclosure amounts to an admission of indebtedness, or of the possession or control of property, etc., of the defendant, does not contemplate a finding of facts as in ordinary actions. The disclosure is not the same as a trial of disputed facts in ordinary actions. Where issues are made on a supplemental complaint filed, and perhaps where a claim is made by a third person, a trial must be had as in a civil action, and, if the trial' is by the court, it ought probably, to state its findings of fact as in ordinary actions. Where the decision of the court below is upon the disclosure alone, it is that we must look to, and not to the court’s statement of facts. Second. Where the occupation of the defendant is shown, whether he comes within the meaning of subdivision 11 is a question of law, and not of fact.
The appellant was agent for the garnishee, selling its goods by sample, driving about for that purpose with his own horse and buggy, receiving a weekly salary. Subdivision 11 exempts “the wages of any laboring man or woman, or of his or her minor children, in any sum not exceeding 20 dollars, due for services rendered by him or them for any person for and during ninety days preceding the issue of process,” etc. All men who earn compensation by labor or work of any kind, whether of the head or hands, including judges, lawyers,
Judgment affirmed.