Anchorage Helicopter Service, Inc. v. Anchorage Westward Hotel

417 P.2d 903, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 156
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1966
Docket628
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 417 P.2d 903 (Anchorage Helicopter Service, Inc. v. Anchorage Westward Hotel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anchorage Helicopter Service, Inc. v. Anchorage Westward Hotel, 417 P.2d 903, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 156 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION

Before NESBETT, C. J., and DIMOND and RABINOWITZ, JJ.

DIMOND, Justice.

Appellant employed Robert Immel as a pilot. Immel was indebted to appellee in the amount of $944.93. Appellee brought an action on the debt on August 14, 1963 in the district magistrate court.

On August 28, 1963 a writ of attachment was issued and a notice of garnishment served on appellant’s president, Norman Stone, Jr. No funds were attached, Stone stating that no moneys were owing to Immel at that time.

On October 2, 1963 a default judgment in the amount of $1,131, including interest, costs and attorney’s fees was entered against Immel. A writ of execution was served on appellant on October 14, 1963. In response to the writ, Stone stated that no moneys were due Immel as he was paid in advance.

Three additional writs of execution were issued and served on appellant on February 14, May IS and November 27, 1964. All were returned unsatisfied.

In garnishee proceedings Stone was examined on three different occasions regarding the salary paid to Immel. Stone’s explanation of appellant’s failure to produce moneys of Immel in response to the garnishment process was that Immel had a backlog of debts, that appellant would pay the individual creditors on Immel’s behalf from time to time and then would withhold such amounts from Immel’s salary, and that at the various times process was served on appellant, Immel was indebted to appellant and therefore appellant had no moneys that belonged to Immel.

On January 6, 1965, following the third examination of Stone, the district magistrate made a decision which read in part as follows:

I find that Stone did not act in good faith; that he had adequate notice of the garnishments but sought- to evade the processes of the court. I find that in more than one instance it appears that ‘the garnishee’ had property of defendant liable to attachment in the form of wages and will enter a judgment against the garnishee for the amount of plaintiff’s judgment plus an attorney’s fee of $150 and all costs of process since the first levy of attachment.

Appellant appealed to the superior court which rendered a decision affirming' the judgment of the magistrate court. In an oral decision the superior court stated:

I have been over the employer’s' records ; I have already said that they leave much to be desired, but to me it’s entirely clear from those récords that the'employer when he made repeated' returns of no money due" to Immel, was lying. Actually, there wfefe monies due. Taking his own records, there were monies due when many of those executions were levied on the employer. * * * The employer’s records are such * * * that you can’t figure out how much was due at any particular time. * * ' * I can’t say whether they did or did not come to the amount of this judgment. However * * * it’s almost a cinch that over the period of time that * ⅜ * certainly comes to more than the amount of the bill-—the amount of the judgment here.

Appellant has now appealed to this court. The principal question presented is whether the magistrate court and the superior court reached the correct result in holding that appellant was liable for Immel’s indebtedness to appellee.

*906 The appellee had the burden of establishing that at the time of service of the garnishment process appellant had in its possession personal property belonging to Immel or owed a debt to Immel which would be recoverable by him in an action against appellant at the time of service of the process. 1 Appellant had the burden of establishing an affirmative defense, 2 such as appellant’s asserted right of offset to wages due Immel by reason of advances made by appellant to pay some of Immel’s other creditors.

As to the August 28 and October 14, 1963 garnishments, appellee sustained its burden, but appellant did not satisfy its burden. The evidence showed that during August and October 1963 Immel was employed by appellant at a salary of $1,000 a month, and that wages were paid twice monthly on the first and fifteenth of each month. There was no evidence produced which showed that Immel was indebted to appellant during those two months, or that Re was not otherwise entitled to be paid his iull salary. This means that it must be presumed that Immel had been paid a half-month’s salary of $500 on August 15, 1963, and that when the first notice of garnishment was served on appellant on August 28, 1963, there was then owing by appellant to Immel a debt consisting of wages earned between August 16 and 28. Such wages, computed on a pro rata basis of $500 for the last half of the month of August, would amount to 13/16 of $500, or $406.25. Similarly, on October 14, 1963, there was due Immel wages in the amount of 14/15 of $500, or $466.67.

In holding that the foregoing wages were owing to Immel at the times indicated, we adopt the view that Immel’s salary was earned and owing to him on the dates of garnishment, even though such dates did not coincide with the times established by appellant for the payment of wages, that is, on the first and fifteenth of each month. On August 28 and October 14, 1963 Immel had earned pro rata portions of his salary based on the salary of $1,000 a month. Money earned is money owing within the meaning of AS 09.40.040, 3 despite the fact that money earned as of a particular date may not be payable under an employer’s pay schedule until a later date. If Immel had left his employment on either August 28 or October 14, 1963 he would have been entitled to wages earned as of those dates regardless of the fact that the regular salary payment dates were not until September 1 and October 15, respectively. A debt already due, or for the maturity of which time alone is necessary, is subject to garnishment. 4

As to the garnishments of February 14, May 15 and November 27, 1964, the appellant sustained its burden of establishing the affirmative defense of a right to setoff by showing from payroll records that at those times appellant had made advances on wages to Immel, either for himself personally or for the purpose of paying some of *907 his other creditors. But the setoff to which appellant was entitled on February 14 did not result in appellant owing nothing to Immel, as appellant claimed. The total of advances on that date was $225. Total earnings of Immel as of that date were $350. 5 Giving appellant the right of offset in the amount of $225, the balance of earnings that were subject to garnishment was $125.

A different situation was presented on May 15 and November 27,1964. On May 15 the total of advances that had been made was $577.50, and the wages earned amounted to $500. And on November 27, 1964, the advances totaled $790.50, whereas earnings amounted to 12/16 of $500, or $375. Because the advances exceeded earnings on those dates, Immel would have been unable to maintain an action against appellant for the recovery of wages.

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Bluebook (online)
417 P.2d 903, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anchorage-helicopter-service-inc-v-anchorage-westward-hotel-alaska-1966.