Goodwin v. Brooks

ORMOND, J.

The act of 5th Februrary, 1840, requires a summons to issue to the assignee or transferee of a debt, when the garnishee discloses, by his answer, that he has received notice that the debt in his hands has been assigned or transferred_ [Clay’s Dig. 63.J The design of this law was to enable the plaintiff in attachment to contest the validity of the alleged transfer or assignment. The statute does not point out the mode in which this contest shall be made; but' as it does not contemplate that the assignee shall answer the process of garnishment, effect can only be given to the statute by requiring the plaintiff in attachment to allege the invalidity of the assignment or transfer, to which the assignee would be required to answer, and thus an issue would be made to be determined either by the court or jury, as might be proper. Here, it appears, the assignee appeared in obedience to the summons, and the plaintiff in attachment making no allegation whatever against him, the court discharged him. We are unable to perceive what other course the court could have pursued. The plaintiff must, be presumed to have been in court when the cause was called, and making no objection, must be intended to have abandoned the further pursuit of the garnishment. The plaintiff in attachment is the actor in the proceeding, and if he does not prefer his allegations against the assignee, he will be entitled to his discharge for the omission of the plaintiff to prosecute the inquiry. These are the necessary legal inferences from the record; and if in truth the plaintiff has not abandoned the prosecution, and the court improperly, and against the will of the plaintiff, discharged the assignee, it should have been disclosed by bill of exceptions.

Let the judgment be affirmed.

COLLIER, C. J.

The provision of the attachment law, under which Terrill Brooks was summoned to contest with the plaintiff the validity of the transfer, under which he claimed the notes in question, clearly authorized the notice that was awarded bythe circuit court. The fact thatBaldwin, the garnishee, had substituted for the original, new notes payable to Terrill Brooks, cannot exempt the debt from the process of garnishment, if the transfer was fraudulent or voluntary as between the latter and Hiram Brooks. There is, then, no reason shown why the proceeding was dismissed, and the holder of the notes discharged. The *839plaintiff does not appear to have been in default; if an issue was necessary, it was to be made up under the direction of the court; the plaintiff should have been required to proceed in the cause, instead of being turned out without an opportunity of litigating the question proposed.

The premises upon which the court found the order of dismissal, is the answer of the garnishee, and the notice to Terrill Brooks; and there is not the slightest- intimation that the plaintiff was not in court ready to do whatever the law required of him. Now,- according to logical sequence, it must be intended that the decision of the courtwas influenced bythe premises stated; andthat it was supposed the facts did not authorize the proceeding. The assumption that the plaintiff was in fault, is, I think, unwarranted; and to maintain that he should have excepted to the judgment of the circuit court, is to require that which, in my opinion, does not comport with the analogies of the law.

Influenced by these views, I am constrained to dissent from the conclusion which my brethren have expressed.