Barton v. Spencer

41 P. 605, 3 Okla. 270, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 41 P. 605 (Barton v. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barton v. Spencer, 41 P. 605, 3 Okla. 270, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 31 (Okla. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dale, C. J.:

September 20, 1893, Barton Bros, filed a petition in the district court of Canadian county, against P. S. Kern, alleging that there was due upon account to the plaintiffs in said action, the sum of $370. At the same time the plaintiffs filed an affidavit of garnishment, wherein it. was alleged that one L. M. Spencer had in his possession and under his control and custody jDersonal property belonging to said P. S. Kern, and that said defendant had no other property exempt from execution sufficient to satisfy plaintiffs’ claim and demand, and that the property in Spencer’s hands was not exempt from seizure or-sale under attachment or execution. This garnishment summons was duly served in the manner required by law. The garnishee, L. M. Spencer, answered to the effect that P. S. Kern, the defendant in the proceeding instituted by Barton Bros, on the 20th day of September, 1893, made an assignment of a general stock of merchandise, accounts, etc., to him, the said Spencer, for the benefit of his creditors; and that said stock of merchandise and accounts was appraised at the sum of $2,350. That he, Spencer-, assignee, whs in no way indebted to the defendant, nor had he been since the commencement of the action, nor was he at the time the summons in garnishment was served upon him. In due time, the plaintiffs served notice of their *272 election to take issue on the answer of the garnishee, and thereafter filed their reply to his answer, (1) generally denying all of its allegations, and (2) alleging that the assignment was void as to the plaintiffs, and the grounds upon which it was claimed that the assignment was void were set out in different paragraphs. The plaintiffs, Barton Bros., applied to the court for an order making- the sheriff of Canadian county a party defendant, alleging in their application that the sheriff had received writs of attachment and executions against P. S. Kern, placed in his hands by different parties, and that he had served the same by levying upon the property held by Spencer, as assignee, and that such writs of attachment and executions were subsequent in time to the service of summons in garnishment upon said Spencer, and alleged that, under the writs of attachment and executions, the sheriff had taken all or nearly, all of the property out of the hands of Spencer, and thereby making it impossible for Spencer to surrender enough of said property upon the garnishment proceeding to satisfy the claim of the plaintiffs. Afterwards, Spencer, by supplemental answer, showed that the entire property in his hands as assignee at the time of the service of summons in garnishment, had been taken by the sheriff upon writs of attachment and execution subsequent to the date upon which the garnishment process was served upon him. The case came on for trial upon the issue joined between Barton Bros, and the sheriff and the parties claiming through the sheriff, under the writs of attachment and executions, and upon such issue the court below held and concluded as follows :

"That the summoning of the defendant, Spencer, did not create a lien of any kind upon the property of the defendant Kern, in the hands of Spencer at the time of the service of such summons in garnishment upon him, and did not place such property in the cus *273 tody of the law, and that' the levy of the attachment thereon by the defendant, the sheriff, after such garnishment, and with knowledge thereof, did not make such levies and the rights claimed thereunder by the execution and attachment plaintiffs, subject and subordinate to the garnishment, and the levy of such at-taciiments were as fully effectual as though no garnishment had occurred previous thereto, and the making of >the sheriff a party to the action while said property was in his hands, did not affect the attachment, nor make the same subject to the orders of the court in the case, and the property or its proceeds can not be made subject to the order of the court in this action, applying the same to the payment of plaintiff’s claim, but the same must be released from the temporary injunction, and inure to the benefits of the plaintiffs in the attachments and executions.”

And in the judgment rendered in the action, also entered a personal judgment against L. M. Spencer, garnishee, in favor "Of Barton Bros, for the full amount of their claim against Kern.

In explanation of a portion of this judgment, it may be well to state that Barton Bros, had procured a temporary injunction against the sheriff, enjoining the sheriff from turning over to the attachment and execution creditors, the money received from the sale of the stock of goods levied upon under the writs of attachment and execution.

Barton Bros, bring this case here, and assign as error, the conclusion of the court wherein it was held that Barton Bros, obtained no lien against the property in the hands of Spencer, the assignee, by virtue of the service of the garnishment summons upon said Spencer.

There is but one question before us to decide, and that is, did the service of the garnishment summons upon Spencer prior to the service of the writs of attachment and executions, have the effect of a lien upon the property held by Spencer in favor of the *274 garnishee creditors? Spencer, the man to whom Kern assigned his property for the benefit of his creditors, and against whom the court rendered a personal judgment, did not appeal, and the judgment rendered in the court below against him, is not here for consideration. Plaintiffs in error are contending for their lien upon the goods by virtue of their proceedings in garnishment. The court below held that, as against the subsequent attaching and execution creditor's, no lien was created. Exhaustive briefs have been filed by both parties, and we have carefully examined all the authorities cited, which we are able to obtain, and, after consideration, reach the conclusion that the court below was in error.

Numerous decisions will be found in support of either doctrine, and we will not attempt to review all of them in this opinion, but will content ourselves in citing some of the cases which support our view, and which we think present the correct principle of law: Beamer et al. v. Winter et al., 41 Kan. 596; Brashear u. West, 7 Pet. 608; Burlingame v. Bell, 16 Mass. 318; Focke et alv. Blum et al., (Texas) 17 S. W. 770; Ide v. Harwood, 30 Minn. 191; Mattingly v. Boyd, 20 How. 128. These cases and the authorities therein cited are some of the principal ones which we think uphold our view of this question. An examination of the statutes of the states from whence these decisions come will show that they are similar to ours in many respects.

As against the doctrine, the principal cases cited are McGarry v. Lewis Coal Co., 93 Mo. 237; Bigelow v. Andress, 31 Ill. 322; McConnell v. Denham, 72 Ia. 494.

In McGarry v. Lewis Coal Co., supra, the decision is apparently based upon a statute which, in our opinion, gives an express lien in favor of a garnishment process as against all subsequent claimants. Section 5221, Laws of Missouri, 1879, is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 P. 605, 3 Okla. 270, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-spencer-okla-1895.