H. A. Grimwood Co. v. Capitol Hill Bldg. & Const. Co.

65 A. 304, 28 R.I. 32, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 A. 304 (H. A. Grimwood Co. v. Capitol Hill Bldg. & Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. A. Grimwood Co. v. Capitol Hill Bldg. & Const. Co., 65 A. 304, 28 R.I. 32, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 6 (R.I. 1906).

Opinion

Dubois, J.

These cases, which involve the validity of attachments sought to be made, by trustee process, upon the balance alleged, by the plaintiffs, to be due from George E. Darling, the garnishee, to the defendants, under a building *33 contract, came to this court, and for convenience were heard together, upon exceptions to the rulings of the presiding justice of the Superior Court made in charging said George E. Darling as garnishee of the defendants in the first named case, and in discharging him in each of the other cases. To the ruling of the justice in the first case the garnishee excepted, and the bill of exceptions therein was filed and is prosecuted by him while in the other cases the exceptions were taken and are prosecuted by the respective plaintiffs in those cases.

(1) The first named plaintiff objects to the prosecution of the exceptions taken by the garnishee, on the ground that he was neither a party to the action in which the ruling was made, nor was he aggrieved thereby, and because the bill of exceptions does not comply with that portion of section 490 of the court and practice act which requires that “He shall file in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court his bill of exceptions, in which he shall state separately and clearly the exceptions relied upon.”

The bill of exceptions is of the tenor following:

“State op Rhode IslaNd. Superior Court.
“H. A. Grimwood Co.,
vs. No.
“Capitol Hill Building &
Construction Co.
“Bill op Exceptions.
“Now, after final judgment in above case, and after decision of the court charging the garnishee for $600.27, the garnishee, George E. Darling, files his bill of exceptions, and for cause of exceptions shows:
“ 1st. That the decision of the court in charging said garnishee is erroneous and contrary to law on the facts set forth in the answers to interrogatories and affidavits made by him, the said George E. Darling, and duly filed in court, in that no right of action existed in favor of the said defendants, or either of them, against the said garnishee at the time of said attachments.
*34 “2nd. That the decision of the court in charging the said garnishee is erroneous and contrary to law on the facts set forth in the affidavits and interrogatories made by said garnishee, and duly filed in court, in that no right of action existed in favor of the said defendants, or either of them, against the said garnishee at the time of said attachments, as to the sum finally found in the hands and possession of the said garnishee (after deducting the several amounts due from the said defendants to said garnishee), namely: $600.27.
“3rd. That the decision of the court in charging the garnishee is against the evidence as set forth in the affidavits and answers to interrogatories filed by the said garnishee.
“Wherefore the said George E. Darling prays that said decision be reversed and that he be discharged.
“George E. Darling.
“By his Attorney, Terrence M. O’Reilly.”

And it bears the following endorsement:

“At the hearing on plaintiff’s motion to charge the garnishee, the court granted the motion and charged the garnishee for the sum of $600.27. To this ruling the garnishee excepted. The above as a statement of exception is allowed.
“William H. Sweetland,
“P. J. Sup’r. Ct.”

The bill of exceptions, as allowed, substantially complies with the foregoing provision. The exception relied upon is an exception to the ruling or decision charging the garnishee, setting forth the reasons why it is claimed to be erroneous, and referring to the affidavits and answers of the garnishee for the statement of- facts from which the conclusions are to be drawn.

(2) That an exception lies, in favor of a garnishee, to the ruling of a court charging him as such, has been settled by the practice of the court. See Wightman v. Kruger, 23 R. I. 78; Grieves v. Keane, Ibid. 136. It is true that a distinction has apparently been made by the legislature between the words “party” and “garnishee” as may be seen by comparing sections 471, 472, with section 481 of the court and practice act; but as sec *35 tions 471 and 472 aforesaid are revisions of Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 251, § 2, in which, the words “party” or “garnishee” are used in the same connection and with the same distinction, when compared with Gen. Laws cap. 250, § 12, it is fair to presume that those words were continued in the revision in preference to others that had not received judicial construction.

A charged garnishee may therefore be regarded as a party to the proceeding. And if he has been erroneously charged as garnishee he certainly has been aggrieved.

Service of the original writ, in the case of H. A. Grimwood Company against the defendants, was made upon the garnishee July 14, 1904, and on September 3rd of the same year its writ of mesne process was served upon him for the purpose of attaching the personal estate of the defendants in his hands and possession. It is not now claimed that anything was attached by the first service, and the latter is the only attachment relied upon by the plaintiff.

(3) The garnishee filed four affidavits, dated, respectively, July 15 and September 27, 1904, and October 11 and 27, 1905, and his answers to the plaintiff’s interrogatories, October 18 and 26, 1904.

The correctness of the ruling of the presiding justice depends upon the state of facts disclosed by the garnishee in his affidavits and answers to interrogatories relating thereto.

It appears therefrom that, at the time of the service of the copies of said writs upon the said garnishee, there was none of the personal estate of either of said defendants in his hands or possession, directly or indirectly, unless by virtue of a certain written contract existing between them dated February 9, 1904, whereby the defendants agreed to build him a house for the sum of $3,400, payable in three installments: one thousand dollars when said house is boarded; fourteen hundred dollars when it is plastered; and the balance when said house is finished. That the contract bears the following endorsement:

“ Providence, R. I., May 19, 1904.
“I hereby waive the payment of fourteen hundred dollars as the second payment on the within contract and agree to *36 accept twelve hundred dollars as said payment, same to be paid after house is plastered and the furnace installed. All liens to be released.
“F. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 304, 28 R.I. 32, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-a-grimwood-co-v-capitol-hill-bldg-const-co-ri-1906.