We have decided heretofore, that no judgment can be rendered against a garnishee on his answer, unless he distinctly confesses an indebtedness, or states facts from which an indebtedness to the defendant in the judgment at the time the garnishment was served upon him may be clearly inferred. — 3 Por. 105 ; 1 Ala. 421; 3 Ala. 312.
We have also decided, that if the garnishee, after service of the writ of garnishment, is notified that the evidence of his indebtedness to the defendant in the judgment had been transferred to another before such service, he may state the fact in his answer, and it shall protect him from a judgment on the garnishment. — 2 Ala. 117; 12 Ala. 594.
But it has never been held, that a garnishee may shield himself by claiming to hold a demand on the defendant in *277the judgment, in which he had not the legal title at the time of the service of the writ of garnishment. Wore this the law, it would lead to corrupt agreements between holders of specialties against insolvent defendants in execution, and the debtors of such defendants, by which executory agreements, made without consideration, before the service of garnishment, may be perfected afterwards, and thus defeat the bona fide judgment creditor in the collection of his demand.
In Bostwick & Kirkland v. Beach, 18 Ala. 80, we held, that a garnishee, who answered that he was indebted to the defendant in attachment, but that lie was the owner of a note made by him to a third person for a larger amount, and which had been transferred by delivery to the garnishee before service of garnishment, was but an equitable holder of the note, and could not set it up against the debt for which he was summoned as garnishee.
We have also held, that no demand is subject to be recovered by writ óf garnishment, on Which the defendant in the judgment, who is also the creditor of garnishee, could not maintain debt, or \indebitatus assumpsit.• —20 Ala. 384; 11 ib. 273; 18 Ala. 80. The process of garnishment, in this State, is strictly a legal writ, and can only be resorted to in order to reach legal liabilities. This being the case, it would seem to follow, that when the garnishee seeks to exempt himself from liability on account of a claim which he holds against the defendant in the judgment, such claim, in order to protect him, must be a good legal set-off to his own indebtedness— such a set-off as he could have made available against his ‘creditor, had the latter sued him, in his own name, on the day on which the writ of garnishment was served upon him. This, in our opinion, is the true test in such cases ; for the Writ of garnishment is but the commencement of a suit at law against the garnishee, .not, indeed, by the creditor with whom he contracted, butlby onb'on whom our laws confer the right to^bring’such suit. —15 Ala. 183.
Let us try the indebtedness^! the Tgarnishee in this cáse by these rules. In his’ánswer,=he admits that, at the service of the garnishment, he was indebted to Lilly in a larger sum, (even if we take the lowest alternative sum which he names,) than Lilly owed to Self, and for which he now seeks *278to charge Kirkland. Had the answer stopped at this point, there could be no question as to Self’s right to a judgment against him. But he seeks to discharge himself by setting up, as an off-set against Lilly, a note due to one Hall, which he agreed to receive before the service of the garnishment, but which, in fact, never came to his hands, either by delivery or assignment, until after that event. Under these circumstances, was it a set-off in his hands ? Waiving the suspicious circumstances which surround this transaction between Kirkland and Hall, as they are disclosed in the answer, such as the antedating of the assignment, the cautious manner in which Kirkland states his interest, his forbearing to say that he paid, or was to pay anything for it, unless it became available in his hands against his indebtedness to Lilly; waiving all this, we say, still he docs not show that the legal title to the note was in him when the garnishment was served. At that time it had neither been delivered nor assigned to him, and, under our previous decisions, could not be an off-set in his hands against Lilly’s demand in a direct suit between them.
We have frequently held, that an off-set, to avail the defendant in a suit at law,, must be due and owned by him at the service of the writ in the suit in which it is pleaded. —White v. Word, adm’r, 22 Ala. R. 442; Harbin v. Levi, 6 ib. 399; Cox v. Cooper, 3 ib. 256. The answer, in this case, clearly shows that Kirkland' had not the legal interest in the note to Hall when the garnishment was served upon him, and it no where appears that this note was due at that time ; it could not, therefore, be allowed as an off-set in the hands of Kirkland.
The answer, when stripped of all that relates to the note of Hall, confesses an indebtedness to Lilly in the sum of $28 or $30, a larger amount than the judgment of Self v. Lilly; and we think the court below should have rendered judgment against Kirkland for the amount of Self’s judgment against Lilly.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.