American Trust & Savings Bank v. O'Barr

67 So. 794, 12 Ala. App. 546, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 282
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 67 So. 794 (American Trust & Savings Bank v. O'Barr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Trust & Savings Bank v. O'Barr, 67 So. 794, 12 Ala. App. 546, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 282 (Ala. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

THOMAS, J.

The appellee, O’Barr, commenced suit by original attachment against one Turner, in aid of which a writ of garnishment was then sued out and served upon the Mitchell Mountain Coal & Iron Company, as garnishee, who filed answer admitting an indebtedness of $2,705.99, but suggesting the appellant, the American Trust & Savings Bank, as claimant. The latter, having been brought in by citation, propounded its claim to the fund, which was predicated upon an assignment to it of the same by the defendant in attachment, Turner. The plaintiff (appellee) contested the claim on the ground that the assignment was fraudulent and void as to him; and, from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, the claimant appeals, assigning, among other alleged [549]*549errors, the action of the court in giving the general affirmative charge for plaintiff.

The evidence, without dispute, disclosed the following facts: The defendant, Turner, became indebted to the plaintiff in April, 1913, in the sum of $76.36, for the recovery of which the suit was brought on June 21, 1913. The fund ($2,705.99) in the hands of the garnished at the time of the service of the garnishment was the balance due under a contract between defendant, Turner and the garnishee, executed on August 19, 1912, whereby Turner, for a stipulated price, payable as the work progressed, was to construct five miles of railroad for the garnishee, furnishing all necessary labor and material. The road had been completed at the time of the service of the garnishment. Shortly after the making of this contract between the defendant Turner and the garnishee, and long before said Turner became indebted to the plaintiff,- he (Turner) on August 26, 1912, for a recited consideration of “one dollar and other valuable and sufficient considerations in hand paid,” transferred and assigned in writing to the American Trust & Savings Bank (the claimant here) all sums then due or that might thereafter become due and payable to him under said contract with garnishee. The garnishee was notified of the assignment and had assented to the same and had made many payments under the contract to the assignee long before the issuance and service of the garnishment writ; This transfer and assignment was absolute in form; but it appears from the evidence, without dispute, that it was in reality given merely as security for an advance of money ($800) then made by said bank to said Turner, and for such future advances as it might thereafter make.him — all of which, at the time of the service of the garnishment, -aggregated something over $12,000. It appears, however, that the [550]*550sum ($2,705.99) in the bands of tbe garnishee at the time of the service of the writ, when added to what the garnishee has already paid the claimant under the assignment, will more than repay (by $135) the claimant for all advances made by it to defendant Turner.

While this excess is fully adequate to more than pay the debt - ($76.36) for which plaintiff brought his suit against defendant Turner, yet it cannot be reached under a writ of garnishment against the garnishee here, unless the said assignment of. said Turner to the claimant bank is fraudulent and void in toto as against the plaintiff, for it is a general rale of law that the plaintiff cannot reach and subject to the payment of his debt by process of garnishment any funds, property, or demands that the defendant debtor could not recover in an action (ex contractu) against the garnishee; the rale being subject, however, to an exception, which is, that the plaintiff can so reach such assets in the hands of the garnishee when they have been fraudulently assigned or conveyed by the defendant debtor to a third person, although, on account of such assignment, the debtor himself could not recover them of the garnishee.—Alexander v. Pollock, 72 Ala. 137; Cunningham v. Baker, 104 Ala. 168, 16 South. 68, 53 Am. St. Rep. 27; 3 Mayf. Dig. 892.

If, therefore, the assignment in the present case is not fraudulent and void in toto as against the plaintiff, then, although the amount assigned is in excess of what is sufficient to fully pay the debt due the assignee (claimant here), the plaintiff’s remedy is to garnishee the assignee and thereby reach the excess sum that will come into its hands, as a result of the assignment, before such excess is paid over to the defendant (Henderson v. Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co., 72 Ala. 32), for, if the assignment is not so entirely fraudulent and void, then [551]*551to sustain tbe present garnishment would be to permit the plaintiff to obtain a judgment against the garnishee here for a part of the sum assigned, which would result in the splitting up of a single cause of action against the garnishee, who before the garnishment had, by accepting and assenting to the assignment, bound itself to pay the whole fund to the assignee. Hence, to hold that the plaintiff may recover a part and the assignee a part would be to hold that one cause of action may be split into several.—Kansas City, M. & B. R. Co. v. Robertson, 109 Ala. 298, 19 South. 432, and cases cited.

The fund assigned was not, as insisted by plaintiff’s counsel, wages or salary within the contemplation of Gen. Acts 1911, p. 370, declaring void all assignments of wages or salaries to be earned in the future; but was as seen, the contract price for building live miles of railroad and was to become due in the future under an existing contract, as described, and as such had the character of assignability.-Payne v. Mobile, 4 Ala. 333, 37 Am. Dec. 744; Wellborn v. Buck, 114 Ala. 279, 21 South. 786; Harrison v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 120 Ala. 42, 23 South. 790.

Nor was it necessary, as insisted, to the validity as against plaintiff of such assignment that it be recorded, since our registration statutes have no applicability to such an assignment.—Rowland & Co. v. Plummer, 50 Ala. 182.

There is no evidence whatever tending to show or to afford any inference that there was any actual fraud or mala tides in the transaction between defendant and claimant; hence, the only question in the case is as to whether or not there was any constructive or legal fraud that would vitiate the assignment. Section 4287 of the Code declares that: “All deeds of gift, all conveyances, transfers, and assignments, verbal or written, [552]*552of goods, chattels, or things in action, made in trust for the use of the person making the same, are void against creditors existing and subsequent, of such person.”

In the construction of this section our Supreme Court have said incidentally that an assignment absolute in form of a chose in action, when intended merely as se-' curity for a debt, is, without more, void as against the creditors of the assignoT, because (quoting the language of the court) “there is a reservation of a benefit to the transferror, a trust for his use” (Truitt v. Crook, 129 Ala. 379, 30 South.

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Bluebook (online)
67 So. 794, 12 Ala. App. 546, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-trust-savings-bank-v-obarr-alactapp-1914.