Fitzgibbon, Exr. v. Dechant

16 N.E.2d 794, 58 Ohio App. 453, 12 Ohio Op. 274, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 391
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.E.2d 794 (Fitzgibbon, Exr. v. Dechant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgibbon, Exr. v. Dechant, 16 N.E.2d 794, 58 Ohio App. 453, 12 Ohio Op. 274, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 391 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

Edward W. DeChant, a county commissioner of Lorain county, was receiving a salary as such official of $150 a month, payable on the first of each month.

On August 2, 1937, he filed an application in the Municipal Court of Lorain for the appointment of a trustee under Section 11728-1, General Code, and such trustee was appointed on August 19,1937, and DeChant was authorized by the court to draw his salary and pay to such trustee that portion of his personal earnings not exempt from execution, attachment or proceedings in aid of execution.

Appellee (Cárroll E. Pitzgibbon, executor, a creditor), after one of his attorneys had been told by the trustee on October 21, and again on October 29, 1937, that no payments had been made to the trustee by DeChant, filed, in the Common Pleas Court, on October 29, 1937, a motion for proceedings in aid of execution in a cause wherein appellee had recovered a judgment against DeChant; and that motion was granted.

On November 3, 1937, DeChant filed a motion in the Common Pleas Court to quash said proceedings in aid of execution, and after several hearings that motion was denied.

Notice of appeal was seasonably filed, and the mat *455 ter is before this court as an appeal on questions of law.

It is urged that, inasmuch as a trustee under Section 11728-1, General Code, had been appointed, and appellee’s claim had been filed with the trustee, the appellee could not prosecute proceedings in aid of execution, and that therefore the Common Pleas Court erred in overruling the motion to quash and ordering the garnishee, the treasurer of Lorain county, Ohio, to pay to appellee 20% of the salary due to DeChant on October 30, 1937, and to pay to DeChant the balance of his salary due on that date.

It is' also urged that, DeChant being an elected county official, his salary as such could not be sequestered by proceedings in aid.

As to the claim that, as none of DeChant’s indebtedness was for necessaries or work or labor, his exemption was 90% and not 80%, it is' urged that because Section 10273, General Code, provides that the demand necessary to be made before proceedings in aid against personal earnings are instituted “may be for the excess above 90% earned during the interval of thirty days,” appellee was entitled to sequester only 10% of DeChant’s salary, instead of 20%, as provided by the exemption statute governing (among other things)' personal earnings, to wit, Section 11725, General Code.

We hold against DeChant upon that contention.

Before Section 11728-1, General Code, providing for the appointment of a trustee, was passed, the law provided (Section 11725, General Code) for an exemption of 80% of the debtor’s personal earnings as against a claim for necessaries or work or labor, and an exemption of 90% as against all other claims, and at the time provision was made for the appointment of a trustee by Section 11728-1, General Code, said exemption statute (Section 11725, General Code) was amended to provide an exemption of 80% for all claims, although *456 provision was made in Section 11728-1 for a preference in favor of claims for necessaries or for work or labor, in tbe distribution of tbe 20% not exempt.

At said time, the various procedural statutes applying to tbe Common Pleas Court and to inferior courts were amended so as to conform to such change, with tbe exception of Section 10273, General Code, relating to procedure in tbe justice courts, where reference is made to tbe 90% exemption that existed in tbe law before tbe exemption statute governing personal earnings (Section 11725, General Code) was amended, as hereinbefore set forth.

Section 10273, General Code, is not an exemption statute, but is a procedural statute applying to tbe justice courts, and was appropriate when tbe exemption statute governing personal earnings (Section 11725, General Code), provided a 90% exemption for certain claims and an 80% exemption as to other claims, but has no appropriate application under tbe present wording of Section 11725. Then, as now, tbe Exemption applicable in all courts was fixed by Section 11725, General Code; both before said amendments were made, and since, it was and is provided by Section 11728, General Code, that-tbe exemptions provided for in Section 11725 should apply to all courts in the state, “including justices of tbe peace and mayors’ courts.”

Even if Section 10273, General Code, could be considered as an exemption statute, it would be inapplicable, because of tbe later amendment of tbe exemption statute • (Section 11725, General Code), and tbe provisions of Section 11728, General Code, which make tbe exemptions set forth in Section 11725 applicable to justices’ courts.

We bold that, under tbe statutes as they now are, tbe exemption of 80% applies to all claims, and that tbe preference given to claims for necessaries is applicable *457 only upon the distribution provided for under the trustee statute.

As to the claim that because of the trusteeship the Common Pleas Court should have quashed the proceedings, in aid of execution which were brought in that court:

The trusteeship statute (Section 11728-1, G-eneral Code) provides that “The trusteeship herein provided for shall terminate upon the failure of the debtor to make the payments required- by this act and in accordance with the rules established by the justice of the peace or judge, and all privileges in this section provided from attachment, garnishment, proceedings in aid of execution or any other action to subject personal earnings of such debtor to payment of claims or judgments shall terminate upon such negle.ct and remain so terminated until such time as a justice of the peace or a judge, upon application of said debtor, amd notice to creditors, shall reinstate such trusteeship.” (Italics ours.)

We hold that, inasmuch as said statute grants to the debtor a privilege which he can claim and enjoy only by compliance with the statute, said statute is' self-executing; and when it áppears, in a proceedings in aid of execution in the Common Pleas Court, that the debtor has not complied with said statute, the court has the right, and it is its duty, to treat the trusteeship as ended, so far as the proceedings in aid in that court are concerned.

In this case the Common Pleas Court found that DeChant had not complied with the terms of the trusteeship, and such finding is' fully warranted by the evidence in the'bill of exceptions.

According to the bill of exceptions, the Municipal Court has failed to establish any rules governing such trusteeships in that court; and the record shows that such court made but one order in this particular trus *458 teeship, that being the order appointing the clerk trustee ; and that order, instead of directing the treasurer to pay to said trustee the portion of the personal earnings of DeChant which were not exempt from execution, attachment or proceedings in aid of execution, simply ordered DeChant “to make his own payments into court.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cooper v. Schooley
159 N.E. 727 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1927)
Uricich v. Kolesar
5 N.E.2d 335 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.E.2d 794, 58 Ohio App. 453, 12 Ohio Op. 274, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgibbon-exr-v-dechant-ohioctapp-1938.