Gruver Construction v. Dunning

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 31, 2020
Docket121355
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gruver Construction v. Dunning (Gruver Construction v. Dunning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gruver Construction v. Dunning, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 121,355

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

JAMES GRUVER CONSTRUCTION, INC., Appellant,

v.

STEVE DUNNING and BRENDA DUNNING, Defendants,

and

GREGORY CARTER, Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Reno District Court; TRISH ROSE, judge. Opinion filed July 31, 2020. Affirmed.

Thomas A. Dower, of Gilliland Green, LLC, of Hutchinson, for appellant.

No appearance by appellee.

Before STANDRIDGE, P.J., HILL and ATCHESON, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Kansas law requires a judgment debtor in a contested garnishment proceeding to prove that the disputed funds are exempt from garnishment. In the garnishment trial here, the court held that James Gruver Construction, Inc. failed to prove the money in its checking account belonged to someone else. We affirm that ruling because once the funds were deposited in the company's checking account, they became the property of the company. It had dominion over the funds and the company could use 1 them as the company wished. The company offered no real proof that the money in its account belonged to someone else.

We reject Gruver Construction's collateral attack on a judgment in a garnishment action. Because the company raised this claim more than one year after the original judgment was entered against it, we hold it is barred by K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-260(c) from making it now. We affirm the district court's holding.

An unpaid carpenter seeks payment for his work.

The facts are not disputed. Gregory Carter, a carpenter, intervened in litigation between Gruver Construction, a general contracting company, and Steven and Brenda Dunning, clients who had hired Gruver Construction to build them a home in Hutchinson. Carter had worked on the Dunning house and had not been paid by Gruver Construction. In June 2016, Carter received a judgment against Gruver Construction for $14,953.60 with interest at 18 percent a year.

The company made no payments to Carter on the judgment. About two and a half years later, Carter garnished Gruver Construction's bank account. Gruver Construction objected. The court denied Gruver Construction's claim that the funds in the account were exempt from garnishment because they were being held "in trust" for a client, Mike Alger, who Gruver Construction was building a house for. Alger had paid the money to Gruver Construction so that it could pay invoices for subcontractors working on his new house. The court was not persuaded that these funds were held in trust for Alger. In the end, the court found Gruver Construction owed Carter $31,245.67 on the judgment with the accumulated interest and awarded that amount to Carter. Gruver Construction appeals.

On appeal, Gruver Construction makes two arguments:

2 • The district court erred when it found that the funds in First National Bank of Hutchinson were Gruver Construction's property, rather than a client's property, and therefore subject to garnishment; and • even if the funds were properly garnished, the 18 percent annual interest rate that the court ordered is not allowed by statute, so the judgment is void.

The company asks us to remand the case so the district court can recalculate the amount owed to Carter using a 10 percent annual interest rate. Carter has not filed a brief with this court.

A review of the law of garnishments is helpful.

After a judgment creditor, such as Carter here, secures a judgment against the judgment debtor, like Gruver Construction, the creditor may begin garnishment proceedings to attach property owned by the debtor but held by a garnishee. See K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-731. Here, the funds were held by a financial institution—the First National Bank of Hutchinson. The statute states that the judgment creditor must have a good-faith belief that the party that receives the garnishment order "has, or will have" assets that belong to the judgment debtor. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-733(g).

After the financial institution has been served with a garnishment order, the judgment creditor must notify the debtor that the debtor has a right to show that this property is exempt from garnishment. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-735(a). To show that the property in the account is exempt, the judgment debtor can ask for a hearing under K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-735(b). At that hearing, the judgment debtor bears the burden of proof to show that any of those funds held by the garnishee are exempt from garnishment. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 60-735(c).

3 The case that controls this issue is LSF Franchise REO I v. Emporia Restaurants, Inc., 283 Kan. 13, 152 P.3d 34 (2007). In that case, the court reviewed a contested garnishment action where two bank accounts were attached. The court reversed our court's and the district court's holding that the funds were exempt from garnishment. In doing so, the court made several important observations.

First, one way a judgment debtor can prevent the attachment of any money is by showing that the funds do not belong to the judgment debtor. A judgment against the garnishee must be limited to the actual, and not apparent, property of the defendant in the possession or under the control of the garnishee at the time the garnishee summons is served upon him or her. Thus, the parties in a garnishment proceeding may offer evidence to show who owns the disputed property. LSF Franchise, 283 Kan. at 21-23.

And the name on a bank account does not necessarily decide the matter of ownership. The court held that "ownership by the judgment debtor of an account in a financial institution is not necessarily determined by the name put on the account." LSF Franchise, 283 Kan. 13, Syl. ¶ 6. That is because funds may belong to some other person, such as when they are held by a fiduciary. In that case, the funds in the account are exempt from garnishment. The LSF Franchise court held that it was the duty of the court to decide to whom, in equity, the deposit beneficially belonged. 283 Kan. at 22-23.

But the LSF Franchise court also pointed out that the judgment debtor had to provide proof that was not just an assertion. Testimony of the judgment debtor that funds in a financial institution are to be used for a specific purpose is not enough to establish the ownership of monies in a particular account. A judgment debtor seeking to show other ownership of disputed funds must provide more evidence that would show that such funds were assigned to another and thus not subject to garnishment. 283 Kan. 13, Syl.

4 ¶ 7. In LSF Franchise, the judgment debtor testified that the funds in the account were being held to pay withholding taxes and thus did not belong to the debtor and were exempt from garnishment. The debtor offered no more evidence than that testimony.

That is similar to the argument made by Gruver Construction. Gruver Construction argued at the garnishment hearing that the funds in its bank account were being held in trust for a client so that Gruver Construction could pay invoices sent by subcontractors working on the client's new home.

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