delivered the opinion of the court.
The admitted facts are that a writ of garnishment was issued by the clerk of the Circuit Court, founded on a judgment recovered by the New Orleans Insurance Company against A. Morin, directed to the Southern Express Compairy, and served on its agent, Thomas Y. Bailey, the defendant in this suit, at which time there was a package of money ($100) in the hands of Bailey, agent, addressed to A. Morin. Subsequent to the service of the writ, J. Morin, claiming to be the real *573owner of the package, tendered the charges thereon and demanded the same, and, on refusal, brought replevin against Bailey. A motion to dismiss the appeal from the justice of the peace was made on two grounds: first, that the justice of the peace did not have jurisdiction, because the subject-matter is involved in a suit pending in the Circuit Court; second, the propeify was impounded in the possession of the garnishee, and, when replevied, was in the custody of the law, at the suit of the insurance company against Morin.
It is insisted that the effect of the service of the garnishment on the express company was to impound in the custody of the law whatever effects of A. Morin it might have in possession, or whatever it might owe him. The service of the writ created an initiate and inchoate right on the package of money, which would be consummate by a condemnation of it by judgment against the garnishee.
It has been said from the earliest times that property in the custody of the law cannot be disturbed or withdrawn by process from another court, but must remain until that particular contestation has been decided. If a state court has, by a seizure of its officer, acquired jurisdiction over the thing, the Federal court cannot, by its process, cause that thing to be taken from the control of the state tribunal, and hold it amenable to its adjudication.
But the rule is subject to other important modifications. The writs of attachment, or fieri facias, authorize and protect the sheriff in the seizure of the defendant’s goods, but are no' uthority to take any other person’s — as, where the writ is against A, and the goods of B are taken; in such case the goods weré not, in the true sense of the rule, in the custody of the law. The immunity to other process is dependent on the fact of whether the officer’s seizure was rightful. Clark v. Skinner, 20 Johns. 466. The court repeated, in that case, what had been said in Panghorn v. Patridge, 7 Johns. 140: that the real test whether replevin will lie for goods taken by an offi*574■cer was whether the seizure was tortious, in the sense that trespass de bonis asportatis would lie, at the suit of the plaintiff in replevin. Our statute (Code, sec. 1528) gives the action to the party who has the right of immediate possession when the “taking” was wrongful.
The cases in our books, especially Yarborough v. Hooper, 25 Miss. 112, and Fora v. Dyer, 26 Miss. 243, rest on that principle. In those cases emphasis is laid on the fact that the writs only justified the taking of the defendant’s property, and conferred no authority or excuse for taking the property of any other person. Such other person could treat the officer as a trespasser.
In later cases it has been held that replevin would lie, at the ■suit of the debtor, for,,taking exempt personal property, because such property was as completely protected from the writs as ivas the property of the third person; and the sheriff would be a trespasser in taking it. Within the statute, the taking was wrongful, and the plaintiff had the right of immediate possession. So that both the taking and detention were wrongful.
In the case before us the original possession of the express company was lawful; the package of money was delivered to it as a carrier, to perform a certain service with respect to it as bailee. But J. Morin, claiming to be the real owner of the package, on a tender of the'charges for the service, demands that it shall be given to him. If he is the owner, and no other person has acquired his right, the detention would be unlawful and wrongful. The agreed case is that the express company has been garnished on account of the possession of this package, by the insurance company, the judgment-creditor of A. Morin. But there has been no trial or adjudication of that matter; it is pending and undetermined. In Kellogg v. Freeman, 50 Miss. 126, the plea in bar on the debt claimed by Freeman was that the defendant, Kellogg, had been garnished by Battaile & Hubbell, the creditors of Freeman, that *575the defendant has answered admitting indebtedness, that the •attachment suit is pending, and defendant has not been discharged. The plea ivas held to be bad.
It did not show that, by the judgment of the court, he had been condemned to be the debtor of the attaching creditors, instead of his original creditor, Freeman. The remedy of the ■defendant in that case ivas the proceeding defined in section 1451, a substitute for the interpleader in equity. But the ■matter of the plea was no bar to that action.
In this case the suit is for the specific thing, and the objection to the action at law is that the package has been subjected to an initiatory lien, by garnishment process, in behalf of the insurance company; and, therefore, until that ■contraversy has been settled, replevin will not lie against it or its agent. But the plaintiff says that the package is wrongfully detained from him ; and he will not be postponed until that litigation has ended.
The remedy of the garnishee is under section 1451. He may allege that he has been notified that another person •claims title or interest in the debt or property, and by complying Avith the terms of the law the conflicting claimants will be required to propound their claims, and the court Avill decide betAveen them, and he will be protected. That step might be taken in the suit pending in the Circuit Court, of Avhich the garnishment is a part, or the defendant might avail of the proceeding authorized b}' section 656.
These statutory provisions Avere suggested by the embarrassment to which a party might be subject where there Avas more than one claimant of the debt or property for Avhich he Avas sued, and to Avhich he asserted no right. A garnishee, if he admits that he owes the debt, or. has no right to the property, may relieve himself of all risk and responsibility by ■causing the parties Avho have adversary claims to controvert with each other.
If the defendant declines to withdraw from the controversy, as the statute gives him the opportunity to do, he must *576take the chances of the suit in which he is defendant, and cannot move to dismiss it because some other person not a party to the replevin suit has, by legal proceedings, asserted some-right or interest in the property.
It was error to have dismissed the suit on the motion of the defendant in error.
We rest this conclusion on the construction which has been for a long time given to the statute defining the remedy by the action of replevin, and the class of cases to which that, action has been applied.
Nor is it possible that the defendant can be exposed to two-suits by adverse claimants of the property, if he is a mere bailee, without personal interest or right, if he will adopt the plain and simple formula of interpleader prescribed by the-statute.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.