— However equitable may be the order of the County Court, directing distribution of the money, which both Sanford and the plaintiff were seeking to recover, we think it cannot be sustained upon principles of law.
As soon as the amount of the plaintiff’s execution against Stewart, was collected by the sheriff, the money was considered as in the custody of the law ; and the plaintiff might, after demand of the sheriff, upon one day’s notice, have moved the County Court for judgment against him, and recovered the amount received. [Aik. Dig., s. 76, p. 174.]
Whether a claim in suit, or which has been prosecuted to judgment, can be attached by garnishment, so as to defeat the plaintiff in the suit or judgment in a recovery of the money, is a question on which the authorities do not entirely agree. In Grayson vs. Veech, 12 Martin’s Rep. 688, it was held, that as the statute of Louisiana authorised the effects and credits of absent debtors to be attached, it was competent for .the plaintiff in an attachment to cause the amount of a judgment lately recovered against himself by the defendant, to be attached. And in McCarty vs. Emlen, 2 Yeates’ Rep. 190, McKean, Ch. Justice, determined that a debt in suit might be attached in the hands of the defendant in the suit. But in Wallace vs. McConnell, 13 Peters’ Rep. 136, it was decided, that a debt, for the recovery of which a suit was pending in the District Court of the United States, could not be attached by process issuing from a county court — that the priority of the suit will determine the right. “ And where the suit in one court is com*255menced prior to the institution of proceedings under attachment in another court, such proceedings cannot arrest the suit; and the maxim, qni prior est tempore, potior est jure must govern the case. This is the doctrine of this Court in the case of Renner and Bussard vs. Marshall, 1 Wheaton 216, and also in the case of Beaston vs. the Farmers’ Bank of Maryland, 12 Peters, 102 ; and is in conformity with the rule that prevails in other courts in this country, as well as in the English Courts ; and is essential to the protection of the rights of the garnishee; and will avoid all collisions in the proceedings of different courts, having then the same subject matter before them — 5 Johns’ Rep. 100; 9 Johns’ Rep. 221, and the cases there cited.” If the case quoted be a correct ascertainment of the law, it is clear that the judgment of the County Court cannot be sustained. In that case, as in this, the garnishee interposed no objection to the proceeding against him, but his creditor, the defendant, litigated the question.
It has been repeatedly adjudged, that money collected by a sheriff in virtue of an execution, cannot be attached. While it remains in his bands, it is the custody of the law. It does not become the property of the judgment creditor until it is paid over, and consequently is not liable to be attached as his. The writ of garnishment could not supersede the execution, or release the sheriff from a literal compliance with its command, which required him to bring the money into court, so that it might be subject to its order. Ross vs. Clark, 1 Dall. Rep. 354; Alston vs. Clark, 2 Hayw. Rep. 171; Dawson vs. Holcomb, 1 Hammonds’ Rep. 275. Cases have frequently occurred, in which the sheriff has been directed to appropriate money in his hands to the satisfaction of a judgment against the party entitled to it, or in which the right to receive the proceeds of a judgment is contested. In such cases, a decision of the court is necessary to guide and protect the officer in the performance of his duties. But the present was not a proceeding of the character of either of these.
As our judgment may rest upon less disputable ground, we decline expressing an opinion whether the debt due from Stewart to the plaintiff, could be reached by garnishment. It does not appear that a judgment was recovered by Sanford either *256against Stewart as a garnishee, or the plaintiff as a debtor. For any thing appearing to the contrary, there may have been an attachment pending against the plaintiff at the suit of Sanford, in which it is possible no judgment may ever be obtained. If such be the state of the litigation between them, and there is nothing in the record which shews it to be otherwise, the proceedings in the County Court, if allowed to stand, would be the means of wresting money from the plaintiff to pay a demand not prosecuted to judgment; and should no judgment be recovered, he may be compelled to become the actor in Court, in order to his reimbursement.
The entry in the County Court, so far it relates to Sanford’s right to the money in controversy, is wholly unsustained. The proceeding is of a summary character, and according to principles recognized here, must be sustained by the allegations and recitals in the record, and cannot be aided by intendment.
The judgment of the County Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded.