The petitioner seeks a review of an order made by the District Court in a bankruptcy proceeding enjoining him from the collection of his garnishee judgment.
Ransford sued the Fleming Company, a Michigan corporation, in the state court, on its indebtedness to him, and at the same time garnished the National Eumberman’s Bank of Muskegon, Mich, (hereinafter called the bank), in which the Fleming Company had deposited its funds. Judgment was rendered in his favor on October 22, 1910, against the principal defendant for $568.85, and two days later he obtained judgment against the bank, as garnishee, for the same amount. He thereupon caused an execution to issue against the bank. Before any action was taken thereon and within four months of the time Ransford brought his action against the Fleming Company, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against such company in the District Court of the Western District of Michigan, and at or about the same time Ransford was restrained from proceeding further against the bank. 0.n a final hearing, the District Court adjudged that the right to the possession of the funds in the bank passed to the bankrupt’s estate on the adjudication of bankruptcy, and that the trustee was authorized and directed to collect the same. Ransford was at the same time enjoined from further prosecution of his garnishment proceedings. He then brought the case here for review.
The petitioner’s insistence is that by virtue of his judgment against the bank he was substituted for the principal defendant as its creditor to the amount of his judgment against it, in the place and to the exclusion of the Fleming Company, and remitted solely to the bank for the satisfaction of his claim — in short, that the garnishee judgment resulted in a novation. He bases this contention on the rule announced in Neely v. Rood, 54 Mich. 134, 19 N. W. 920, 52 Am. Rep. 802, that, “where money is deposited in a bank, it becomes the money of the bank, and the bank is then the depositor’s debtor for its amount,” and on the provisions of the Michigan statute which authorize personal judgment against the garnishee, if his disclosure shows an indebtedness from him to the principal defendant, whereas, if his disclosure reveals goods and chattels belonging to the principal defendant, the creditor, broadly stated, must exhaust such property and not that of the garnishee, to satisfy his debt, unless the garnishee refuses to deliver the defendant’s property as required by statute. His position is necessarily untenable, if, as was held by the trial judge, garnishment of and judgment against the bank created only a qualified lien in his favor on the debt owing by it to the Fleming Company to an extent sufficient to satisfy his judgment.
[1, 2] We concur in the conclusion reached by the court below. In the strict legal sense, a lien is a right in one person to detain that which is in his possession belonging to another, until certain demands
[3] Subdivision “c” of section 67 of the Bankruptcy Act, however, includes an attachment upon mesne process among liens created by or obtained in or pursuant to any suit or proceedings at law or in equity. Subdivision “f” provides:
“Tlmt all levies, judgments, attachments, or other liens, obtained through legal proceedings against a person who is insolvent, at any time within four months prior to the filing of a petition in bankruptcy against him, shall be deemed null and void in case he is adjudged a bankrupt”
An attachment is thus specifically designated as a lien.
Garnishment process accomplishes in effect the same result as an attachment. In Bethel v. Judge of Superior Court of Detroit, 57 Mich. 379, 24 N. W. 112, it was held that garnishment process is in the nature of an equitable attachment of assets belonging to the principal defendant, but held by a third person, the purpose of which process is to apply such assets in the discharge of the defendant’s debt. The phrase “legal proceedings,” occurring in subdivision “f,” applies to proceedings in garnishment and includes any proceeding in a court of justice by which a party pursues a remedy which the law affords him, and the charge or incumbrance created by garnishment proceedings is one of the “other liens” mentioned in such subdivision, and such it has been held to he. Re McCartney (D. C.) 109 Fed. 621; Re Beals (D. C.) 116 Fed. 530; Bank of Commerce v. Elliott, 109 Wis. 648, 85 N. W. 417; Klipstein & Co. v. Allen-Miles Co., 136 Fed. 385, 69 C. C. A. 229 (C. C. A. 5): Loveland on Bank. (3d Ed.) 545. Garnishment does not create a lien upon effects or credits in the same sense that attachment by direct seizure creates a lien upon properly, but it does create a lien of such a character that, so long as it continues and the garnishee seeks to preserve his own rights, he cannot pay to the principal defendant, nor can the principal defendant collect his debt from him. The inchoate lien created by it takes effect from the time of service and can be perfected only by judgment, on the rendition of which the garnishee becomes a judgment debtor of the creditor; but the lieu is not absolute, but a qualified one, which might at any time he divested by the payment of the judgment by the debtor or by any one acting in his interest. As between the judgment creditor and the hank, while the judgment against the latter remained in force, the indebtedness from the bank could not be appropriated to the payment of the Fleming Company’s debts as against the rights of the judgment creditor, but it had not absolutely become his property. The sheriff had been commanded to enforce payment of sufficient of the indebtedness to satisfy the petitioner’s judgment; but the time within which that was to be done had not elapsed, and the execution was still in his hands unexecuted. The rights of the petitioner were still subject to interception. The case thus falls within the rule
[4] Aside from the fact that the operation of the garnishee judgment as a qualified lien precludes the existence of a novation, there is another aspect of the case which overthrows the petitioner’s contention in this respect. “Novation” is defined to be:
“The substitution, by mutual agreement of one debtor or of one creditor for another, whereby the old debt is extinguished, or the substitution of a new debt or obligation for an existing one, which is thereby extinguished.” 29 Cyc. 1130; Guichard v. Brande, 57 Wis. 534, 15 N. W. 764; Fuller & Rice Lumber Co. v. Houseman, 117 Mich. 553, 76 N. W. 77; Dean v. Ellis, 108 Mich. 240, 65 N. W. 971.
[5] The requisites of a novation are (1) a valid prior obligation to be displaced, (2) the consent of all the parties to the substitution, (3) a sufficient consideration, (4) the extinction of the old obligation, and (5) the creation of a valid new one. Piehl v. Piehl, 138 Mich. 515, 101 N. W. 628; Clark v. Billings, 59 Ind. 508, 509.
[6] To constitute a novation in the true sense, the petitioner’s judgment must be considered and treated as a contract, but to do so is to run counter to the decided preponderance of authorities. 23 Cyc. 673, 674; Black on Judgments, §§ 7—11; 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 763, 764. In Wattles v. Wayne Circuit Judge, 117 Mich. 662, 665, 76 N. W. 115, 116 (72 Am. St. Rep. 590), it was said that “judgments are invariably classified with contracts with reference to remedies upon them'”; but the petitioner is not seeking a remedy on his judgment. The law implies a promise on the part of a judgment debtor to pay a judgment that has been recovered against him, but a judgment differs from a contract in that it lacks the mutual assent of the parties, which is essential to a valid contract, and is usually against the will of the debtor. 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 764; Evans-Snider-Buhl v. McFadden, 105 Fed. 293, 299, 44 C. C. A. 494, 58 L. R. A. 900. The petitioner, therefore, insists that his garnishee judgment resulted in a novation, not by virtue of the consent of himself, the bank, and the principal defendant, but by operation of the law of Michigan, as declared in Neely v. Rood and the statutes on garnishment. The fallacy of this claim is exposed by the provisions of section 10,635, Comp. L. Mich., and the logical results following therefrom. That section is as follows:
“The .iudgment against any person, as a garnishee, shall acquit and discharge such garnishee * * * from all demands by the principal defendant * * * for all such money or property, as aforesaid, paid or delivered by the garnishee by force of such payment (.iudgment); and if any garnishee shall be sued therefor or for anything done by virtue of the provisions of this chapter, lie-may, under the general issue, give the special matter in evidence.”
Without entering at length into a consideration of all the reasons that may be assigned for the conclusion reached, suffice it to say that under the state law it is not the rendition of the garnishee judgment that extinguishes the old debt — the debt of the principal defendant—
' If judgment against the garnishee operates as a satisfaction of the debt against the principal defendant and compels the creditor to look to the garnishee alone for payment, the garnishment law would often prove a snare to entrap the creditor. Should the garnishee fail, the creditor would go empty-handed, although the principal defendant might be abundantly able to pay. A creditor could not safely take judgment against a garnishee of doubtful financial responsibility, if tile mere rendition of a garnishment judgment discharges, pro tanto, tile principal debt.
[7] The objection that, by reason of the alleged adverse nature of the claim made by petitioner, the District Court had no jurisdiction to entertain summary proceedings, by way of injunction, cannot be sustained. It follows, from what lias been said in the opinion, that the petitioner was not in adverse possession, actual or constructive, of the fund in question. The proceeding in the District Court was a controversy between the trustee in bankruptcy and the petitioner, as to which was entitled to receive payment from the garnishee defendant of the indebtedness primarily owing to the bankrupt’s estate. The rights of a garnishing creditor can be no greater than those of an attaching creditor, and as the rights of the latter are voided by a bank
There is no error in the record, and the court below is affirmed.