I dissent from the opinion of the court, both as . , . , _ 1 , , „ _. to the merits ot the case, and as to the mode of proceeding,
I do not wish to be understood that there may not be cases in which a garnishee would not be relieved from the consequences of an erroneous answer; but in this case, I consider the garnishees have no claims whatever to relief, as the matter stands before us.
The answer determines the fact, that, at the time of the service of the attachment, there was in the possession of the garnishees sufficient property of the defendant to satisfy the plaintiffs’ debt. The object of the interrogatory was to ascertain from the garnishees if they had in their hands property of the defendants, which was available to the plaintiffs in their attachment. “ Have you property in your possession, or under your control, &c.,” was the question. The answer is in the affirmative, positive and direct.
If the cotton had been previously attached, it was not under the control' of the garnishees; it was, in the eye of the law, in the custody and possession of the sheriff; (Code of Prdctice, 257): and though it may have been permitted to remain in their hands, it was in the custody of the law. 8 Martin, 511.
In the case of Deblanc vs. Webb and others, the Supreme Court held, in a case in which the garnishee neglected to answer one of the interrogatories put to him, but had answered fully two others, that, by neglecting to answer the interrogatory categorically, they had subjected themselves to have judgment rendered against them, according t.o the spirit of article 263, Code of Practice. “To permit the garnishees now to avoid the legal effect of their negligence in not answering this interrogatory, would, in our opinion, violate express law, and might in other cases, lead to prevarications and unnecessary delays in the administration of justice.”
The garnishees in this case, by their answer, acknowledge that they have property in their possession belonging to the *470defendant sufficient to satisfy the plaintiffs’ debt; in the other case, this fact is taken for confessed by the court, and hi both cases the garnishees are in precisely the same situa-^011 *n vesPect to tbe plaintiffs; one is bound by his judicial, the other by his implied judicial confession. If judgment be lawfully rendered against them in one case, the rules of practice, as well as those of justice, require that the garnishees be condemned in the other.
The case of Blanchard vs. Cole, 8 Louisiana Reports, 157, is similar, in point of principle, to the former. The answer to the interrogatories were not sufficiently precise and formal, and the judgment was rendered that the plaintiffs’ judgment should be satisfied out of the property attached.
It strikes me as particularly novel, that a garnishee, after having made an acknowledgment, in his answer on oath to interrogatories propounded to him, should be able to defeat entirely its operation, by merely pleading a matter which the garnishee knew perfectly well at the time of making his .declaration. If error, fraud, violence, or the loss of the property attached had been urged on behalf of the garnishees, a different case would have been presented; but the only fact for which they claim an exemption from the operation of their judicial confession, they knew at the time of making it as well as they do now, and neglected to disclose in their answers. The plaintiffs, without any notice of this attachment which is to be used to defeat their claim, proceed in their suit to judgment.
Had they been apprised of this attachment; had they been notified of the existence of any claim on the property attached; had they been informed that it was in the custody of the law, and might not be rendered available to them, they might have sought their remedy elsewhere against the defendant or his property, but in the present instance they have been induced to continue their proceedings by the confession of the garnishees that they had property in then-hands which would be applied to the payment of their debt. It would be permitting a party to take advantage of his own neglect, to defeat the plaintiffs on the grounds assumed by *471the garnishees. I do not wish to be understood as saying that the garnishees would necessarily be exposed to loss by being obliged to pay an amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment from the funds in their hands, but that even if they 3 . J were, that circumstance would not change the action of the court, in a case like this, against them.
As to the mode of proceeding adopted by the plaintiffs, I think the case is equally free from difficulty. The gár-nishee is a party to the suit, and, as to the matters at issue between him and the plaintiff, he is a defendant, as much so as the defendant himself. Whether the plaintiff wishes to contradict the garnishee’s answers; whether the garnishee answer evasively, or does not answer at all, the proceedings are directly against the garnishee in the same suit. I believe such to be the general practice in this state. I have met with no instance to the contrary. In every case which has come before the Supreme Court, and which I have examined, the proceedings against the garnishee are direct in the same suit, and he is considered a defendant. See the cases cited. Allyn vs. Wright, 9 Martin, 273, and 1 Louisiana Reports, 230; Code of Practice, 264.
The plaintiffs having obtained a judgment against the defendant, took a rule on the garnishees to show cause why they should not be condemned in solido, as garnishees, to pay to the plaintiffs the amount of their judgment.
The garnishees, in answer to the rule, come into court, and allege for cause, that the cotton attached in this case had been previously attached in their hands at the suit of S. W. Oakey & Company, by whose request and assent the same has been sold, and that the proceeds, amounting to five thousand one hundred and eighty-seven dollars and sixty-one cents remain in their hands, subject to these attachments.
S. W. Oakey & Company are not parties to this suit. Under the article 396, et seq., of the Code of Practice, the mode is pointed out in which their rights are to be asserted, and if they do not choose to litigate their pretensions in this suit, I see no reason why they should be an impediment and *472hindrance to these proceedings: at all events, I do not think the garnishees, in this instance, have a right to set them up for their own protection against the supposed consequences of their own neglect.
Here, then, are the garnishees, having in their hands the proceeds of the property attached, and placing them at the disposal of the court, leaving Oakey & Co., the creditors in the previous attachment, to assert their rights in the manner which they think best to adopt; and they may have very good reasons for not becoming parties to this suit: they may have other property attached sufficient to satisfy their debt, or may not choose to contest the plaintiffs’ demand. I think a sufficient part of the property attached ought to be applied to the payment of the judgment obtained against the defendant. 2 Gallison’s Reports, 96. The rule asks for judgment against the respondents as garnishees in solido. The form of the rule taken on the garnishees I consider to be immaterial, as they have not objected to it., but have, by their answer, brought the merits of the case fully before the court, on which the court ought to decide according to the rights of the several parties before them.
I think the judgment of the court below ought to be reversed, and that the judgment should be for the plaintiffs, as before stated.