delivered the opinion.of the court.
This suit commenced by attachment. The plaintiffs, having obtained a judgment against William D. Culver, one of the defendants, took a rule against the garnishee, John M. Phillips, to show cause why he should not pay the amount of said judgment, out of said defendant’s property, attached in his hands. The garnishee, in answer to this rule, averred, that nothing belonging to William D. Culver had ever been attached in his hands, and denied being indebted, in any way, to said defendant.
To judge of the liability of this garnishee, it will be necessary to notice such parts of his answers to plaintiffs’ interrogatories as may be material to the view we have taken of this case. These answers were filed on the 9th of July, 1838. He “declares, that on the 2d of April preceding, he purchased, jointly with one C. C. Rhodes, the steam-boat Clinton, from Louisa D. Culver, assisted by her husband, the defendant in this suit, and one James Knowles, for the sum of ten thousand five hundred dollars ; that he and his co-purchaser paid three thousand dollars in cash, and for the balance, gave their notes, part of them drawn by himself, and endorsed in blank by Rhodes, and part drawn by Rhodes, and endorsed by himself in blank, payable al six, twelve and eighteen months, at the Atchafalaya Bank, in this city ; that he held himself justly indebted to the holder or holders of his notes, but that he was unable to say who were the holders.”
The opinion we have formed as to the absence of any liability on the part of the garnishee under these answers, renders it unnecessary for us to notice a question raised in relation to the rights of a husband over the personal property of his wife, under the common law, which is admitted ta prevail in Kentucky, the domicil of these parties.
Our Code of Practice, (article 246, et seq.,) points out the manner of attaching rights and credits belonging to a debtor, in the hands of a third person. It provides, that such third *452person may be cited to declare, on oath, what property belonging to defendant he has in his possession, or in what sum he is indebted to such defendant. It is evident, that negotiable notes, from their very nature, can be attached but in two ways, to wit: by actual seizure of the notes themselves, or by attachment in the hands of a person holding them, as the property of the debtor. In this case, negotiable paper, supposed to belong to defendant, is attempted to be attached by interrogatories propounded to the maker, and upon the latter answering that he does not know by whom his notes are held, he is sought to be made liable as if he had actually declared himself indebted to defendant. Untenable as such a position would seem to be, an effort has been made to support it by argument. It is said that the attachment was laid in garnishee’s hands before he had notice of the transfer of his notes, and a series of decisions of this court have been cited by the counsel for the appellants, to show that the transferee of a debt is only possessed as it regards third persons, after notice has been given to the debtor, of the transfer having been made ; than this, there is, perhaps, no principle of our laws better settled ; but it obviously applies only to credits not in a negotiable form.
Negotiable notes cannot be attached in the hands of the maker, after they are put in circulation. It can only be done by either seizing the notes, or attaching them in the hands of a holder, as the property of the debtor.As to notes endorsed in blank, which circulate and pass, from hand to hand by mere delivery, it has never been, nor can it be pretended, that anjr notice of trausfer is necessary. Louisiana Code, 3128.
If, then, no such notice is ever given, how is a garnishee, who has issued his promissory note, endorsed in blank, to know in whose hands it happens to be at the precise moment when he is called upon to answer interrogatories % and if, perchance, he were to know that his note was still the property of the defendant, and were so to declare it, could such a proceeding restiain its negotiabilityCould it affect the rights of a bona fide holder ? Surely not. The ownership of negotiable paper is incessantly varying, before its maturity, and the obligation of the maker of such instruments is not to pay to any particular person, but to the holder, at ¡maturity, whoever he may be. Thus, it is obvious, that the *453garnishee, in this case, could give no other answer than that he has made, and it is equally obvious, that by pursuing this course, the plaintiffs have attached no property out of which their judgment can be satisfied.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.