This suit was brought by appellant in the county court of Scurry county, against R.S. Ragsdale and Boyd Y. Rea. The appellant at the same time sued out a writ of garnishment against the First State Bank of Hermleigh. In the original suit, plaintiff sought judgment for $307.83. On July 14, 1924, appellant obtained a default *Page 726 judgment against Ragsdale and Rea, and thereafter the appellant filed a motion for judgment against appellee alleging that appellee had been duly served with a writ of garnishment and had failed to answer therein. The appellee filed a motion to quash the writ of garnishment alleging that the writ purports to have been issued by the county court of Nolan county, when the said proceedings were pending in Scurry county, Tex. The trial court sustained the motion of appellee and quashed the writ of garnishment, and the suit is brought before this court for review.
"The court erred in holding that the writ of garnishment, otherwise regular, was fatally defective because it was signed `Kate Cotton, County Clerk, Nolan County;' the writ bearing the seal of the county clerk of Scurry county, Tex., and Kate Cotton being in reality the county clerk of Scurry county."
Article 277, Vernon's Sayles' Texas Statutes provides:
"The writ of garnishment shall be dated and attested as other writs, and may be delivered to the sheriff or constable by the officers who issued it, or he may deliver it to the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, for that purpose."
The writ of garnishment in this case was in all respects regular and in compliance with the law, except the county clerk in signing the writ indorsed same as the county clerk of Nolan county, when in fact she was the clerk of Scurry county. The writ bore the seal of the county court of Scurry county, Tex. The writ was indorsed on the back, issued February 14, 1924, "Kate Cotton, Clerk," and filed same date by Kate Cotton, clerk of Scurry county, Tex. At most, the failure of the clerk to enter the proper county after her signature would be purely a ministerial act and subject to amendment. In the case of Rule Mercantile Co. v. Opry (Tex.Civ.App.)
In the suit of Dickinson v. First State Bank of Blackwell et al. (Tex.Civ.App.)
