Dahlman v. Greenwood

74 N.W. 215, 99 Wis. 163, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 4
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 74 N.W. 215 (Dahlman v. Greenwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dahlman v. Greenwood, 74 N.W. 215, 99 Wis. 163, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 4 (Wis. 1898).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed February 8, 1898:

Winslow, J.

Schneider Bros, gave a chattel mortgage upon their stock of goods and book accounts to several creditors, with the oral understanding that one of such creditors (i. e. Greenwood’s Bank) should take possession of the property, and convert it into money for the benefit of all the mortgagees. The mortgage covered all the firm property save two claims of $500 each against certain insurance companies, and the bank immediately took possession of the mortgaged property. This transaction unquestionably constituted a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors, which, not being executed in the manner provided by the statute, was void as to the other creditors of the firm. Winner v. Hoyt, 66 Wis. 227. The fact that the mortgage did not cover all of the property of the firm does not affect the legal consequence. Maxwell v. Simonton, 81 Wis. 635 ; Jameson v. Maxcy, 91 Wis. 563. The plaintiff was a creditor of Schneider Bros, at the time the mortgage was given, and [167]*167■garnished the bank while the stock of goods was still in its .possession under the mortgage, and upon the same day garnished both the insurance companies. A few days later, Schneider Bros, made a voluntary assignment, under the statute, of all of their property, to the defendant Greenwood, who duly qualified and assumed the duties of his trust, and took possession of the mortgaged property under an order of court, and proceeded to convert the same into money; such action, however, being without prejudice to the rights of the mortgagees and garnishing creditors. The right of the plaintiff to claim any advantage over other creditors by reason of his garnishment is challenged upon two principal grounds, and these grounds will be considered.

1. It is said that, if the mortgage was fraudulent as to ■creditors, then the mortgaged property was liable to seizure upon writ of attachment or execution, and, hence, that it was an abuse of process to commence garnishment proceedings, because there was property, liable to execution, sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand. E. S. 1878, sec. 2753. It is true that garnishment process will be set aside if it is shown that the defendant had property, liable to execution, sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand. German American Banle v. Butler-Mueller Co. 87 Wis. 467. But it is also true that the statute (R. S. 1878, sec. 2768) provides that any property held by the garnishee under a conveyance void as to the defendant’s creditors shall be embraced in the garnishee’s liability. Under this provision it has been the ■custom to attack such transfers as the one before us by garnishment proceedings, as numerous cases in this court will show, and we are not aware that the right to do so has been questioned until now. While it is undoubtedly true that the mortgaged property might be seized by the officer under a writ of attachment or execution, and the question of bona fides afterwards tested in a replevin action, it also seems undeniable that the legislature, by enacting the provision last [168]*168cited, in sec. 2168, clearly intended to allow the question to be tested in garnishment proceedings. Such certainly has been the understanding of the bar and of the courts, and much may be said in favor of this method. It is far more orderly, less arbitrary,.and involves no violence, nor the use of a strong hand. The two provisions must be ' construed together and harmonized, if possible. This may be readily done by construing that part of sec. 2753, R. S. 1878, which provides that the affidavit of garnishment must state that the defendant has not property liable to execution sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, to mean property which is not in the possession of third persons claiming title or ownership thereof. This, we think, is a reasonable construction, and harmonizes the two sections, and disposes of this contention.

2. It is claimed that the garnishment proceedings created no lien upon the mortgaged property, and, hence, that the subsequent voluntary assignment of Schneider Bros, conveyed the property to the assignee. The statute provides (ch. 349, Laws of 1883, as amended by ch. 451, Laws of 1887) that a voluntary assignment shall, under certain specified circumstances, avoid a large class of sales, mortgages, and other transfers of property made within sixty days prior to the assignment, but it does not provide that garnishments shall be thereby defeated. The argument is, however, that unless there was a specific lien, created by the garnishment, on the property, then it passed by the assignment, and, by operation of law, defeated the garnishment. In this connection it is argued that the proceeding by garnishment is analogous to proceedings supplementary to execution, and reliance is placed upon the decision in the case of Holton v. JBurton, 78 Wis. 321. In the last-named case, supplementary proceedings were commenced against Burton before a court commissioner, and an injunction granted, which did not, however, enjoin him from making a voluntary assignment. [169]*169Burton thereupon made a voluntary assignment of his property under the statute. After the assignment the court commissioner appointed a receiver in the supplementary proceedings, and upon application the circuit court vacated the order appointing a receiver. Upon appeal this court affirmed this order, holding that, under the law and rules of court then in force, the making of a voluntary assignment after the commencement of supplementary proceedings, but prior to the appointment of a receiver and to the acquiring of any specific lien upon the property, was intended to supersede, and in fact did supersede, the supplementary proceedings.

Admitting the analogies which exist between supplementary proceedings and garnishment, it is not difficult to see the very obvious differences between the Burton Case and the one now before us. In that case no property had been found in the hands of any one who was before the court. The proceedings had been commenced, and the defendant had been enjoined from disposing of property, which injunction, however, did not, under the law and rule of court, prevent him from making an effective voluntary assignment, under the statute, of all his property. Not only had no property been reached, but no party had been reached who had any property of the defendant in his hands. In the present case, however, prior to the assignment a party had been served with garnishment process, who had in his hands more than $2,000 worth of property, under a conveyance void as to the plaintiff. The moment that process was served, the law had stepped in, and declared that from that time the garnishee should “ stand liable to the plaintiff ” to the amount of such property, unless exempt, or at least to an amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment obtained by the plaintiff in the main action. "While that right or liability may not amount to a lien on the specific property held by the garnishee, the law nowhere expressly or impliedly provides that it shall be divested by a subsequent garnish[170]*170ment process. The garnishee becomes a trustee of the property for the benefit of the plaintiff, and is so denominated in some jurisdictions, and the plaintiff acquires a specific right to have it held to satisfy his claiml Rood, Garnishment, §§ 193, 194. Our conclusion is that the rights acquired by the garnishment were not affected by the subsequent assignment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 N.W. 215, 99 Wis. 163, 1898 Wisc. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahlman-v-greenwood-wis-1898.