Horat v. Jackel

Per Curiam:

These were garnishee proceedings upon judgments, upon which executions had been issued, and returned “no property found.”

The first objection taken to the proceedings is, that the affidavits upon which the garnishee process was sued out, were sworn to before a justice of the peace, instead of before the clerk of the circuit court, as required by the statute.

A similar objection was taken in Fergus v. Hoard, 15 Ill. 357, that the affidavit upon which the ea. sa. had issued in that case, was sworn to before the clerk of the court, by whom the writ had been issued, instead of a justice pf the peace, as provided, in section 1, ch. 52 R. S.; and the court said, the objection was. answered by section 3, ch. 76 R. S., which expressly authorized clerks “to administer oaths or affirma^tions to witnesses and others, concerning anything pending, or proceeding commenced or to be commenced before them •” that this provision authorized the clerk to administer the oath.

The same answer may be made to the present objection, that a subsequent clause of the same section expressly authorizes all justices of the peace “to take affidavits and depositions concerning any matter or thing, process or proceeding, depending, or to be commenced in any court, or before any justice of the peace, or on any occasion wherein such affidavits or depositions are authorized or required by law to be taken.” This provisioirauthorized the justice of the peace to take the affidavit. Another error assigned is, in rendering final judgment against the plaintiffs in error, at the return term of the garnishee summons.

The statute under which-'these proceedings were had, provides, that the garnishee shall be examined and proceeded against in the same manner as required by law against garnishees in original attachments. The attachment law provides, in case the garnishee shall fail to appear and make discovery, a conditional judgment shall be entered against him, and a scire facias shall be issued against him, returnable to the next term of the court, to show cause why the judgment should not be made final.

Only a conditional judgment should have been rendered against the garnishees at the return term, and it was erroneous to enter a final judgment against them at that term.

The act of February 22, 1861, has not, as is contended, altered the practice in this respect.

The only change it makes in the previous law is, that the garnishee process may be taken out in vacation, making it returnable like other process, and providing that no judgment by default shall be rendered, unless the process shall have been served ten days before the return day.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.