This action was begun before a justice of the peace at the city of Independence and is on a contract for the purchase of a piano whereby a balance of $63 is claimed. No- service was had upon the defendant hut the railway company was summoned as garnishee on the claim that it owed defendant certain money. The company answered admitting it owed defendant $84.
Judgment was rendered against the company as garnishee and it appealed to the circuit court. In the latter court plaintiff moved to dismiss the appeal for the reason that no notice of appeal was given; and the garnishee moved to dismiss the case, or strike it from the docket, on the ground that the justice of the peace and consequently the circuit, court had no jurisdiction of the case. The trial court overruled the motion to dismiss the appeal and sustained the motion denying *342jurisdiction. There was no service on defendant or appearance by him. Plaintiff’s action and garnishment is founded on. the contract for the piano which was filed with the justice as plaintiff’s statement of his cause of action. It recites that the contract was made in Kansas and that it was to be governed by the laws of that State. It also provided that installment payments on the contract were due and payable at plaintiff’s place of business in Kansas City, Missouri. These facts appeared upon the face of the proceedings before the justice and the question is, had he jurisdiction under the provisions of the following statute (Laws 1911, p. 141). “Section 1. No wages shall be attached or garnished before personal service is had or obtained upon the defendant, unless the suit be brought in the county where the defendant resides, or in the county where the debt is contracted and the cause of action arose or accrued, and in cities over one hundred thousand inhabitants in the ‘city’ where the defendant resides or the debt is contracted and the cause of action accrued: Provided; the petition or statement filed in the cause and the writ or summons of attachment or garnishment shall affirmatively show the place where the defendant resides and the place where the debt is contracted and the cause of action arose.”
“ Section 2. Wages earned out of this State, and payable out of this State, shall be exempt from attachment or .garnishment in all cases where the cause of action arose or accrued out of this State, unless the defendant in the attachment or garnishment suit is personally served with process; and if the writ of attachment or garnishment is not personally served on the defendant, the court issuing the writ of attachment or garnishment shall not entertain jurisdiction of the cause, but shall dismiss the suit at the cost of the plaintiff. In all actions commenced in this State in which it is sought to garnish or attach wages, the *343petition or statement filed in such, cause and the summons or writ of garnishment or attachment shall affirmatively show the place where the defendant resides and the place where the debt is contracted and the cause of action arose.”
As there was no personal service on the defendant his wages can not be attached or garnished unless the suit is brought in the county or city where the defendant resides, or in the county or city where the debt was contracted and the cause of action accrued. Here, it is conceded the cause of action accrued in the city of Kansas City (35 Cyc. 548; Durham v. Spense, L. R. 6 Exch. 46) and the action, under the specific direction of the statute, should have been brought in that city.
It will be observed that the statute requires that the plaintiff shall affirmatively show in his statement and in the writ of summons the place where the defendant resides and where the debt is contracted and where the cause of action arose. The contract, which is plaintiff’s statement, in giving the name of the defendant as purchaser does recite that he is party of the second part “of Dwight of the county of Morris, State of Kansas.” If that be allowed to be sufficient so far as the statement is concerned, there is no showing what the summons contained. Plaintiff fias omitted that writ from his record altogether. We must, therefore, treat the case, for present purposes, as though defendant did not reside in Kansas City or Jackson county.
It was not necessary in the state of the record that the garnishee should have given notice of appeal in order to raise the question of jurisdiction.
It follows the trial court correctly ruled that the justice court and it, on appeal, had no jurisdiction and the judgment is affirmed.
All concur.