On October 30, 1909, A. B. Spencer Lumber Company, a corporation, having sued the Read Land & Lumber Company, another corporation, for an indebtedness of 3747.90, sued out a writ of garnishment against the board of trustees of school district No. 1 of Zavala county, Tex., alleging that it had in its hands as trustees effects belonging to said defendant. After the writ was served upon said board of trustees, •it appeared with the county judge of Zavala county in the county court of Uvalde county, wherein the original suit was pending, and, without waiving any of the legal rights, privileges, or exemptions of a school district, answered that it was indebted to said Read Land & Lumber Company in the sum of $300 for certain material furnished it by said defendant under a written contract, which material was used in the erection of a schoolhouse in and for said district. Afterwards, on November 30, 1909, William Buchanan filed in the case a petition for leave to intervene, in which he alleged, in substance: That on June 11, 1909, the Read Land & Lumber Company executed and delivered him its three certain promissory notes for the sum of $252.40 each, payable, respective
The only assignment we need notice is that which complains of the court’s sustaining the motion to strike out intervener’s pleadings of intervention. This action of the court does not extend to the sufficiency of his pleadings, but is to the effect that he had no right to -intervene at all. If the exceptions contained in plaintiff’s supplemental petition had been presented and sustained, intervener might have, by amending them, cured their defects, if there -were any. But the blow dealt him was a solar plexus, a clear knockout before he could enter the fight for what he claimed he was entitled to. Therefore we need consider his pleadings only for the purpose of determining his right to intervene, for, if they disclose such right, as an -inter-vener he was entitled to an opportunity to have his claim adjudicated though his petition or plea of intervention may have been open to some of the exceptions interposed thereto by the plaintiff. If, as is stated in his petition for leave to intervene, which was reiterated in his plea of intervention, defendant, the Read Land & Lumber Company, delivered to his attorney and .agent its contract with the -board of trustees of school district No. 1 of Zavala county, with the bills for material furnished under it, for the purpose of securing him in the payment of the promissory notes mentioned, then there was, in effect, an assignment to him of whatever was due or might become due the Read Land & Lumber Company by the board of said school district under such contract, to the extent of the amount due intervener on the notes, for the purpose of securing their payment. And whatever right the said company had to the money due or to become due on said contract, to the extent of -its indebtedness to the intervener on said notes, passed to him by virtue of such assignment. It is apparent from the answer of garnishee that the sum of money it had on hand was due on said contract. This sum of money was the subject of controversy between the plaintiff and the intervener; the issue being which, as between themselves, had the superior right to the fund, the plaintiff by virtue of the garnishment proceedings, or the intervener by virtue of his assignment?
"Garnishment” is a proceeding by which the debtor is compelled to pay another than his creditor, and the right of the creditor is, against his will, transferred to another. It is in its nature a proceeding in rem, and the garnishee is the receiver of the court -to hold the res until it is determined who is entitled to it. The only authority for such a proceeding is statutory, and the plaintiff must follow the statute strictly, and the garnishee cannot safely waive compliance with any of its substantial requirements, or submit to a judgment in an unauthorized garnishment.
In view of the matters alleged and the law applicable to them, we have no doubt as to the right of appellant to intervene in the case and show his right to the money in the hands of the garnishee, just as he could have done had the Read Land & Lumber Company instituted suit against the board of trustees (the garnishee) for the money due on the contract which was assigned him by said company as security for the debt it owed him.
The court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s motion to strike out appellant’s petition or plea of intervention, for which error the judgment is reversed, arid the cause remanded.