Edwards v. Cosgro
This text of 32 N.W. 350 (Edwards v. Cosgro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[299]*299
Section 2683 of the Code provides “ that any person who has an interest in the matter in litigation * * * may become a party to an action between other persons, either by joining the plaintiff in claiming what is sought by the petition, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claim of the plaintiff, or by demanding anything adversely to both the plaintiff and defendant. * * * ” It is very clear that this provision empowers a person to become a party by intervention, to an action or controversy between others, only during the pendency of the action. Under it he cannot come into the case after judgment or final order. Section 3016, however, empowers any person other than the defendant to intervene at any time before the sale of attached property, or before the proceeds thereof, or any attached debt, is paid over to the plaintiff in the action, and make a claim to the property or money. This section, by its terms, applies especially to cases where the property or money has been seized by attachment, or garnishment under attachment proceedings. But section 3051 provides that garnishments on execution shall be effected in the manner prescribed in the sections governing garnishment on attachment, and that in [300]*300every particular the proceedings shall be the same as under garnishment or attachment. The effect of this section is to give third parties who claim the property or money seized on execution, or by garnishment on execution, the right to intervene, and assert their claim at the time and in the manner prescribed by section 3016, and their rights in the premises may be determined in the manner prescribed in that and other sections in the same chapter. As, therefore, the money in question had not been paid over to the plaintiffs when intervenor filed his petition, he had the right to intervene for the purpose of asserting his claim to it.
The fact that the justice had credited the amounts on the judgments in no manner affected his right; for, under the express provision, he had the right to assert his claim in that ' manner at any time before the money was paid over to plaintiff.
The claim that the payment by the garnishee should be regarded as having been made at the request of the defendant finds no support in the record. It appears clearly enough, from the record, that he paid over the money for the purpose of effecting his discharge as garnishee. The justice evidently regarded it in that light, for he entered an order discharging him, which was entirely unnecessary if the payment had been made in any other capacity than that of garnishee.
We think the circuit court erred in affirming the order of the justice striking the petition of intervenor from the files.
Reversed.
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32 N.W. 350, 71 Iowa 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-cosgro-iowa-1887.