Traylor v. First Nat. Bank of Raton

OPINION OF THE COURT.

KAYNOLDS, J.

Plaintiff below,' defendant in error here, sued to recover $859.60, with interest and attorney’s fees, on a note executed by the plaintiff in error. The Bank of Springer was at the same time named as garnishee. An answer was filed to the complaint and a reply to the answer. Plaintiff filed an application for a writ of attachment, and the garnishee bank' answered. Defendant also filed an answer to the application for the writ of garnishment, and to this answer plaintiff filed a reply. The garnishee bank admitted the possession of $1,854.12, the property of the defendant. The defendant’s answer to the application for garnishment denied the facts in said application. With the issues thus made up, after the jury had been impaneled,' the defendant made the following motion:

“The defendant demands that a trial of the Issues raised by the traverse of the plaintiff’s affidavit in garnishment be tried separately from the issues in this case, raised by the answer filed to the plaintiff’s complaint and reply filed to defendant’s answer, and defendant further demands that the issues raised by the traverse of the affidavit in garnishment filed by the plaintiff be tried before the issue in the main case is tried.”

The trial judge denied this motion in the following language:

"I will therefore deny the application for a separate trial but will submit both issues — that is, the issue on the main case and the Issue on the garnishment to the jury — and have them render separate verdicts thereon.”

The defendant excepted to the ruling of the court, and, electing to stand upon said motion, introduced no evidence at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case. The court, on motion of plaintiff, directed a verdict in his favor on the main case and also on the garnishment issue. Separate verdicts were returned by the jury as directed on both issues. From the judgment subsequently entered embodying both verdicts, this appeal is taken by the defendant. The garnishee bank did not appeal.

The plaintiff in error, defendant below, assigns error in the action of the trial court in: (1) Denying him the right to separate trials of the two issues: (2) denying him the right to have the garnishment issue tried'before the main case.

The question is a narrow one and involves only the right to separate trials for these two issues and the order in which they should be tried. No question as to the right of jury trial in a case of this kind is involved; the point.not being raised below and both parties apparently from the record acquiescing without objection, in the trial of the issues by a jury.

Our statutes relating to garnishment do not provide any method or order in which the issues in garnishment proceedings are to be tried. Appellant contends, however, that, attachment and garnishment being similar remedies, the procedure in attachment should be followed. Conceding, but not deciding, that the procedure in attachment suits should be followed in garnishment proceedings, we find that as to the methods and order of trial the statutes on attachment are as follows:

“In all cases when properties or effects shall be attached, defendant may within the time limited in ihe writ of attachment, put in his answer, without oath, denying the truth of any material-fact contained in the affidavit, to which the plaintiff may reply; and trial of the truth of the affidavit shall be had and on such trial the plaintiff shall be held to prove the existence of the facts denied, as set forth in the affidavit as the ground of attachment, and if the issue shall be found for plaintiff, the cause shall proceed, but if it be found for the defendant, the attachment shall be dismissed at the costs'" of plaintiff.” Section 4316, Code 1915.

“In all cases commenced by attachment, in which the truth of the affidavit for attachment or of any material allegation therein contained shall be denied, and the issue thus formed shall, upon the trial be found for- the defendant, the attachment shall be dismissed and all property, rights, effects and credits held or affected thereby, or thereunder, shall be released and discharged from the operation thereof; but such dismissal of the attachment shall not abate the suit, but the same shall proceed as in ordinary cases.” Section 4326, Code 1915.

It will thus be seen that there is no statute which specifically requires the attachment or garnishment issue shall be tried before the main issue, although the above statutes, by inference, seem to indicate that course of procedure. The distinction between the cases contemplated by the statutes and the present one is apparent. The statutes provide, inferentially, for trial of the attachment or garnishment issue-when it is made up and ready for trial prior to the main issue, which is not at that time ready for trial. This is shown by the ease . of Staab v. Hersch, 3 N. M. 209, 3 Pac. 248 cited by the plaintiff in error. There is no reason nor statutory authority for this procedure when, as in this case, both issu.es are made up and ready for trial. In our opinion botb questions are matters within the discretion of the trial court and not subject to review unless such discretion is abused, which is not shown to be the case here. Our statute, Code 1915, § 2795, provides that the jury, at the request of either party, may be ordered to make special findings, and there is no valid reason why two issues cannot be submitted to the same jury as well as two separate findings of fact. As to the order in which these issues should be tided, that also is a matter in the discretion of the court, and unless some good reason is shown why they should be tried in a particular order, or that the manner is which they were tried has worked injustice, the decision of the trial court as to the order in which they should be tried is not reviewable.

Finding no error in the record, the case is therefore affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Parker, C. J., and Roberts, J., concur.