delivered the opinion op the court:
Gower obtained a judgment against the Lexington and Danville railroad company, in the Bourbon circuit court, at its April term, 1859, for $2,482 46, on which execution was regularly issued, and was returned, in substance, “no property found.’’
Gower then filed his petition in equity against the company, alleging its insolvency, but that “he is informed and believes that there are debts due to said road company from certain individuals,” whom he proceeds to designate, including the appellants, with the sums alleged to be due from them respectively. Smith is charged to be indebted to the company “in the sum of $2,500, besides interest, payable in cross-ties, at 40 cents each ;” and that Davis is indebted to said company in the sum of $500, payable in cross-ties, at 40 cents each, besides interest from the 1st of July, 1854. He therefore “prays that the aforesaid debtors of said railroad be made defendants to this petition, and answer the same, and that they each state how much they respectively owe said company, and that the sums respectively owing by them, and each of them, be attached in their hands, as garnishees,” and applied to the satisfaction of the judgment, &c.
No summons appears to have issued on this petition against either of the parties alleged to be indebted to the company; but the record contains this statement: “Attachment returned by the sheriff of Mercer county, no property found, and executed on Abram Smith, July 4, 1859, and on Theodore H. Davis, as garnishees, July 8, 1859. Attachment returned by the sheriff of Fayette county, executed on Patrick Gribbon, June 30, 1852, and S. N. Drake, as garnishees, July 12, 1859.”
*173Of the parties thus shown to have been served with the attachment, none answered except Gribbon. His answer purports to be an answer “to a bill in chancery, exhibited against him and others in the Bourbon circuit court, by A. G, Gower,” and sets out the amount of his indebtedness, which he expresses his willingness to pay to whomsoever the court may direct.
In October, 1859, the court rendered a judgment against “the defendant,” Gribbon, for the amount shown by his answer to be due from him ; also, a judgment against the appellants, Smith and Davis, for the respective amounts alleged in the petition to be due from them, the judgment reciting that they had each “failed to answer the petition, although duly summoned,” and that the court received proof of the amount of said indebtedness; and it was therefore adjudged that the plaintiff recover of the said defendants the sums so alleged to be due from them, respectively, to the railroad company, with interest, &c.; and the suit was dismissed as to the defendant, Drake.
In April following the appellants, 6n regular notice, moved the coui’t to vacate these judgments, on the- ground that they were rendered before the action regularly stood for trial. The motions were overruled, and the appellants have brought the case up, insisting that the order overruling their motion to vacate, and the judgment sought to be vacated, were alike erroneous and should be reversed.
The Civil Code has provided two distinct remedies, or modes of proceeding, either of which may be resorted to by the plaintiff in an execution which- has been returned by the proper officer either as to the whole or any part thereof, “no property found.”
He may institute an, action by equitable proceedings, for the discovery of any money, closes in action, and all other property belonging to the defendant, and for subjecting the same to its satisfaction and in such action, persons indebted to the defendant in the. execution, or holding money or. property in which he has-an interest, or holding evidences or securities for the same, may be also made defendants, (sec. 474.)
*174Or, in the action mentioned, the plaintiff may have an attachment against the property of the defendant in the execution, similar to the general attachments provided for in chapter 3, of title 8, without either the affidavit or bond therein required, &e.
Now, if in this case, the appelle can be considered as having adopted the former of these two modes of proceeding, by making the appellants and other alleged debtors to the railroad company defendants in his equitable action ; if it be true, as the appellants insist, that they were proceeded against, in that action, as defendants, and not as mere garnishees, it is .very clear that, as to them, the action was prematurely heard, and their motion to vacate the judgments should have been sustained upon that ground.
But it is contended, on the part of the appellee, that he adopted the latter mode of proceeding; that he neither sought nor obtained relief against the appellants as defendants in the action, but that they were proceeded against, and treated, by him and by (he court, as garnishees, and.that the judgment was rendered against them in conformity with the rules laid down in the chapter referred to in the 476f/¿ section.
It is quite evident, we think, upon the face of the petition filed by the appellee, that it was framed with the view of proceeding against the appellants and other debtors to the railroad company, as defendants to the action. They were so designated repeatedly in the body of the petition, and, as already shown, the plaintiff “prays that the aforesaid debtors of said railroad be made defendants to this petition, and answer the same,” &c. The court also, in some portions of the judgment, seems so to have regarded them. They are there styled defendants, and'are said to have “failed to answer the petition, although duly summoned,” &c- These, and other circumstances which might be adverted to if it were material, tend strongly to support the position contended for by the appellants, that they were technically and substantially parties defendants to the action, and in that character, and upon their failure to answer the petition, were rendered liable for the debts alleged to *175be due from them, severally, to the defendant in the execution.
On the other hand, it is to be observed, that the judgment against the appellants does not appear to have been predicated upon their failure to answer, but upon the additional fact, distinctly recited, that the court received, proof of their indebtedness to the railroad company. ' Such proof is required in a proceeding against a garnishee who has been summoned as such, but makes default by not appearing, according to other provisions of the Code, which will be hereafter noticed.
But no summons in the action was ever issued against the appellants. The only process ever executed upon them was the order of attachment, the effect of which was to compel them to answer — not as defendants, but as garnishees. The rule of practice was well settled, before the adoption of the Civil Code, that a person who is prayed to be made a defendant, in a bill in chancery, does not thereby become a party. To make him so, process must issue, and service, either actual or constructive, must be had. (Bond vs. Hendricks, 1 Marsh., 592.) And the same rule is expressly recognized and re-enacted by section 65 of the Code, which provides, that “a civil action is commenced by filing in the office of the clerk of the proper court a petition, and causing a summons to be issued thereon.”
It must therefore be assumed, upon this record, that the appellants were not, in the legal sense, defendants to the action, and the ground upon which they based their motion to vacate the judgment is not maintainable.
And this brings us to the inquiry whether the judgment in question was authorized by the provisions of the Code referred to in section 476, and under which the appellee claims to have proceeded.
Such of those provisions as relate to the duties and liabilities of garnishees are to be found in sections 244 to 248, inclusive.
By section 244 the garnishee may pay( the money owing to the defendant by him, either to the sheriff or into court, and he shall be discharged from liability to the defendant for any money so paid, not exceeding the plaintiff’s claim.
*176The next succeeding section directs that each garnishee summoned shall appear. The appearance may be in person, or by the affidavit of the garnishee filed in court, disclosing truly the amount owing by him to the defendant.
Where the garnishee so appears in person he may be examined on oath, and if it shall be thereupon discovered that, at or after the service of the order of attachment, he was indebted to the defendant, the court may order the payment, or security for the payment of the amount owing by the garnishee, into the court, or to such person as it may direct, who shall give bond with security for the same; or the court may permit the garnishee to retain the amount owing, upon the execution of a bond with one or more sufficient sureties, to the effect that the amount shall be paid as the court may direct. Performance of these bonds may be summarily enforced by orders and proceedings as in cases of contempt. (Sec. 246.)
Section 247, which is relied upon as conferring upon the'court the power to render a judgment such as that now under consideration, is in these w'ords:
“The court may, on the motion of the plaintiff, compel the appearance in person, and examination of any garnishee, or officer of a corporation summoned as a garnishee, by process as in cases of contempt; or, where a garnishee makes default, by not appearing, it may hear proof of any debt or property owing or held by him to or for the defendant, and make such order in relation thereto as if what is so proved had appeared on the examination of the garnishee.”
In the case before us, the appellants had been regularly summoned as garnishees ; they had failed to appear either in person or by affidavit, and had thereby made default. The case was strictly within the provisions of the section just quoted. The court might have coerced their personal appearance in court, for examination. That, however, was not done, but the other remedy provided for was adopted; the court heard proof of the debt owing by the garnishees to the defendant. Upon the hearing, of this proof, what was the next duty of the court? To render a final judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the garnishees ? Not at all. The authority of the *177court is strictly limited, in such case, to the making of “such order as if what is so proved had appeared on the examination of the garnishee.” We are, then, to look to the next preceding section for the “order” which the court may make, where the indebtedness of the garnishee appears on his personal examination. In such case “the court may order the delivery of such property, and the payment or security for the payment of the amount owing by the garnishee into court, or to such person as it may direct, who shall give bond with security for the same; or the court may permit the garnishee to retain the property or the amount owing, on the execution of a bond,” &c. Here we have an enumeration of the several orders which the court may make, in the state of case provided for, and at the same time a well defined limitation to the power of the court. It may order the payment of the amount owing into court, or into the hands of a receiver, to be appointed for that purpose, or the garnishee may be allowed to retain the amount due on the terms prescribed. Beyond this the court cannot go. The authority to render a final and absolute judgment, in favor of the plaintiff against the garnishee, enforceable by execution, and beyond the subsequent control of the court, is neither expressly conferred nor fairly deducible from any just view of the policy and objects of the statutes regulating these stringent and summary remedies. And if anything more were needed to demonstrate the correctness of this conclusion, it is to be found in section 248 of the Code, which expressly provides the mode — -and the only mode — in which such judgment may be obtained. “Upon the service of a summons upon any garnishee, or after his failure to make a disclosure satisfactory to the plaintiff, the latter may proceed in an action against hirp, by filing a petition verified as in other cases, and cause a summons to be issued upon it; and thereupon such proceedings may be had as in other actions, and judgment be rendered in favor of the plaintiff, to subject the property of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee, or for what.shall appear to be owing to the defendant by the garnishee. The judgment may be enforced by execution or other proper means.” (Sec. 248.)
M. C. Johnson, for appellee, presented a petition for rehearing,'and cited Civil Code, secs. 245, 246, 247, 248, 250.Now, assuming, as is contended, that the court might, upon the mere default of the garnishee, after being summoned as such, have proof of alleged indebtedness to the defendant, and thereupon render a final judgment against him in favor of the plaintiif, for the amount of the debt so proved, why would the legislature have provided, in the very next section, a distinct mode of proceeding, applicable to this precise state of case, carefully guarding the rights of the garnishee by requiring that a summons shall be issued upon the petition, and thereupon such proceedings to be had as in other actions.
It will be seen that the provisions of the Code we have been considering were intended to apply to cases in which there is an action pending against the defendant, and that many of them are not strictly appropriate or applicable to cases like the present, where there has been a judgment and a return of no property found, and where the whole object is to obtain satisfaction of such judgment. Nevertheless, it is clear that, where the plaintiff chooses to avail himself of the privilege given him by section 476 to resort to the general attachment there provided for, he must pursue the remedy subject to any inconvenience or incongruity which may arise in its application to his case.
Our conclusion therefore, is, that the judgment complained of was unauthorized, for the reasons stated, and it is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.