Groves v. Bibb Sewer Pipe Co.

101 S.E. 190, 149 Ga. 542, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 19, 1919
DocketNo. 1300
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 S.E. 190 (Groves v. Bibb Sewer Pipe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groves v. Bibb Sewer Pipe Co., 101 S.E. 190, 149 Ga. 542, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 316 (Ga. 1919).

Opinion

Fish, C. J.

The Court of Appeals certified to the Supreme Court the following questions:

“1. Section 5272 of the Civil Code (1910) provides that ‘All debts owing to the defendant, and all property, money, or effects of the defendant coming into the hands of the garnishee at or within the times designated in the preceding section, shall be subject to process of garnishment, whether the garnishee had anything in his hands or was indebted anything, to the defendant at the date of the service of the summons or not.’ Does the word ‘property’ in this section include land?
“(a) Section 5304 of the Civil Code (1910) provides that ‘In every case a garnishment may be issued against an executor or administrator for a legacy or distributive share, or for any debt or demand owing by said estate to any other person, if the creditor will swear — in addition to the oath required in ordinary cases — that his debtor resides without the State, or is insolvent. In such cases the executor or administrator shall not be compelled to answer the garnishment' until the estate in.his hands is sufficiently administered to enable him safely to answer the same.’ Do the words ‘legacy or distributive share,’ in this section, include land or an interest therein?
“2. In Mosely v. McGough, 69 Ga. 748, it was held that ‘On the traverse of an answer of not indebted, filed in response to a summons of garnishment, the issue is. whether the garnishee had, at the time of service, or has since had, assets of the defendant in his hands.’ Is this decision sound; or, in such a case, is the correct ruling that the issue is whether the garnishee had, at the time, of service, or between that time and the date of his answer, assets of the defendant in his hands?”

[544]*5441. The general rule is, that, in the absence of express statutory provision, the process of garnishment is not available to a creditor seeking to subject real estate of his debtor, in the possession- of a third person, to the payment of the creditor’s debt. 20 Cyc. 990; 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 807; Waples on Attachment and Garnishment (2d ed.), 360; 2 Shinn on Attachment and Garnishment, §§ 468, 588. In 2 Wade on Attachment and Garnishment § 407, it is said: "It seems almost needless to state that a person can only be garnished in respect to chattels. . . Garnishment in respect to real property would be an idle ceremony, for the reason that the object of attachment is merely to secure the anticipated judgment; and this is better accomplished by obtaining a lien upon the title, than by disturbing the owner’s possession. The title to real estate is susceptible of documentary proof, and is generally a matter of public record. Kecord, therefore, is at once the most effective and expeditious mode of securing a lien upon the title to real estate, and garnishment would be both inapt and inconvenient.” In Drake on Attachment (7th ed.), § 463, it is said: "As to the general basis of a garnishee’s liability, it will be found, on examination, that whatever else may, under particular statutes, authorize his being charged, there are two comprehensive grounds, common to every attachment system, viz., 1. His possession, when garnished, of personal property of the defendant, capable of being seized and sold on execution; and, 2. His liability, ex contractu, to the defendant, whereby the latter has, at the time of the garnishment, a cause of action, present or future, against him. In some States he may be charged in respect of real estate of the defendant in his hands; and in some, on account of choses in action; but aside from such special provisions, the language used in defining his liability, though varied, and often cumulative, will, on examination, be found to resolve itself, in each case, into those two general grounds; which may be considered as fully embraced in any system which provides no more tha'n that one having 'goods, effects, or credits’ of the defendant in his possession may be charged as his garnishee. The addition of the word 'money/ or 'chattels/ or 'property/ or 'rights/ which is frequently found, or that of all of them, is not conceived to enlarge, in legal construction, the basis afforded by the comprehensive terms, 'goods/ 'effects/ or 'credits.’ ” And in section 465, the author says: "Still, the [545]*545rule as stated may be considered generally applicable; and it follows thence, that, without express statutory warrant, one cannot be made liable as garnishee in respect of real estate of the defendant in his possession. . . In most of the States, if not in all, a garnishee may discharge himself from liability in respect of property of the defendant in his hands, by delivering it to the officer. Wherever this is the case, a garnishee should not be charged in respect of property which he cannot so deliver, and, therefore, not in respect of real estate. Moreover, if the conveyance to the garnishee be bona fide, he has no property of the defendant in his possession, and if it be fraudulent, the property is subject to the execution against the defendant, without any disclosure by the garnishee; and so, if the garnishee be made liable by one creditor for the value of the land, he may afterwards lose the land by a sale under another creditor’s execution.”

In Rood on Garnishment, § 177, it is said: “Real estate has generally been considered not to be attachable by garnishment proceedings, upon the double ground, that it is not included in the terms of the statute declaring what property may be reached by garnishment, and that the process is ill adapted to such use, and difficulties would attend its practical application to such property.”

There is no statute of this State now in force which expressly authorizes a creditor by garnishment to subject realty of his debtor in the possession of a third person to the payment of the creditor’s debt. The act of the legislature of December 23, 1822 (Cobb’s Digest, 77), required the garnishee to answer what he was indebted to the defendant, “and what money, effects, property, 'either real or personal, . . is. or was in . . possession at the time the summons was served.” The act of March 4, 1856 (Acts 1855-6, p. 25), which expressly repealed all previous acts or parts thereof on the subject of attachments and garnishments, provided, in the thirteenth section, that garnishees should “depose on oath what they were indebted to the defendant at the time of the service of said garnishment, or what property or effects of his they have in their hands, or had at the time of the service of said summons of garnishment,” etc. The same language is used in the forty-sixth section. In Strickland v. Maddox, 4 Ga. 393 (1848), Nisbet, J., referring to garnishment, said: “The office of a garnishment is to apply the debt due by a third person to a defendant in judgment, [546]*546to the extinguishment of that judgment, or to appropriate effects belonging to a defendant in the hands of a third person, to its payment.” The learned judge evidently had in mind that at the time that decision was rendered there was no statute then in force in this State making land the subject of garnishment. The law as to garnishment embodied in our present Civil Code (1910) is largely the same, in material particulars at least, as declared in the act of 1856, and as contained in our first Civil Code (1863) and in all subsequent codes.

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Related

Elder Building Supply Co. v. Wall
150 S.E.2d 350 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1966)
McIntire v. Raskin
155 S.E. 799 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1930)
Gammage v. Perry
116 S.E. 126 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1923)
Groves v. Bibb Sewer Pipe Co.
101 S.E. 587 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.E. 190, 149 Ga. 542, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-bibb-sewer-pipe-co-ga-1919.