Hayes v. Weisman

116 A. 878, 97 Conn. 387, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 25, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 A. 878 (Hayes v. Weisman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Weisman, 116 A. 878, 97 Conn. 387, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 80 (Colo. 1922).

Opinion

Curtis, J.

The court held, upon the foregoing facts, that the plaintiff, although he had recovered judgment against Musnitsky, was barred a recovery against either defendant under his supplemental garnishment of them, if either of them was indebted to him when service was made, because the plaintiff failed to take out execution and have demand duly made upon them within sixty days after the legal stay of execution caused by the notice of appeal had ceased. The court so held, under its construction of General Statutes, § 5914. This statute, in so far as applicable, reads as follows: “No estate which has been attached shall be held to respond to the judgment obtained in the suit, either against the debtor or any other creditor, unless the judgment creditor shall take out an execution and have . . . demand made on the garnishee . . . within sixty days after final judgment. . . . In reckoning said periods within which the attaching creditor is so required to take out and levy execution, any time during which the issue or levy of an .execution may be prevented or stayed by the pendency of a *391 writ of error, or by an injunction or other legal stay of execution, shall be excluded from the computation.”

The plaintiff claims, in the first place, that in dealing with this statute the court erred in its construction of the last sentence quoted; that the phrase “may be prevented or stayed,” refers to the time during which there is a possibility of future stays. The court held that the phrase did not refer to the mere possibility of future stays, “but does refer to such [légal] stays as actually become effective.” We are satisfied that this is the only reasonable construction of that phrase in § 5914. To hold otherwise, would defeat the obvious purpose of the statute, which is to fix a reasonable limit upon the duration of attachments and garnishments and upon the liability under a garnishment of a person garnisheed.

The plaintiff recovered judgment against Musnitsky on June 13th, 1919, a notice of appeal was filed, but no further steps were taken. No extensions having been granted, the defendant must be deemed to have abandoned the appeal when the time for taking the next step passed without action on his part. That would be not later than two weeks from the rendition of the judgment. General Statutes, § 5826. More than sixty days had elapsed, excluding the time when the issuance of the execution was stayed, before demand upon the execution was made on the garnishee on September 10th and 11th, 1919, respectively.

The two weeks from the rendition of the judgment expired in June, and execution might have been taken out in that month. There is no statute providing that the taking out of execution, or the service of an execution, shall be suspended during the months of July and August, and under the facts in this case, the provision of § 5826, to the effect that all proceedings to make or complete the record on an appeal shall be suspended *392 during the months of July and August, is wholly irrelevant to the issues in this action.

The plaintiff urges that although after the rendition of the judgment against Musnitsky on June 13th, 1919, and his notice of appeal, two weeks expired and no proposed finding was filed by him, yet Musnitsky should not be deemed to have then abandoned his appeal and so opened the door for the issuance of an execution, until ten more days had passed. This .claim is based on § 5826, which allows a possible extension of time for the filing of a proposed finding for ten days further. The plaintiff urges that as such ten days, in addition to the two weeks, would carry the proceedings to complete the record upon appeal into July, and since all proceedings on appeal are suspended during July and August, the sixty days from the stay of execution effected by the notice of appeal, did not expire until July, and therefore when execution was issued and demand was made in September, 1919, the sixty-day period for taking out and levying execution under § 5914 had not expired. This claim is untenable, because no extension of time for filing a proposed finding was either asked for or allowed to Musnitsky. It would be unreasonable and fanciful to hold that he should be presumed to have secured such an extension and continued the life of his appeal for ten days longer, contrary to the fact.

Under § 5967 it is provided that “if he [the garnishee] shall have in any manner disposed of the effects of the principal in his hands ” when served, “or shall not expose and subject them to be taken on the execution, or shall not pay the officer when demanded the debt due to the defendant ” when served, “such garnishee shall be liable to satisfy such judgment out of his own estate in an action of scire facias. The plaintiff claims that this provision gives the plaintiff in foreign *393 attachment a cause of action in scire facias under two states of fact: 1. Where, before judgment against the principal, the garnishee has disposed of the effects of the principal, which were in his hands when garnisheed (including under the term “effects ” a debt due the principal). 2. Where the garnishee shall not expose and subject the effects of the principal, duly garnisheed in his hands, when demand is duly made upon him on execution. The plaintiff claims, therefore, that under the first claimed ground of action no due demand on execution is essential to sustain the action of scire facias, the only limitation in such case being that the action must be brought within one year from its accrual. §6165. The plaintiff admits that no decision can be found in our Reports supporting this claim. He urges, however, that a historical survey of our statutes relating to garnishment, from their origin to date, discloses that in an action of scire facias against a person who has been garnisheed, it is not, in the circumstances of the claimed first ground of action, an essential element of the cause of action that execution shall have been taken out and demand duly made on the person garnisheed. In this action the plaintiff claims that the Connecticut Company was indebted to Musnitsky when the supplemental garnishment was made upon it in June, 1917, and that as it is an admitted fact that the Company turned over to the defendant Weisman the money it paid to settle Musnitsky’s claim against it in June, 1917, and had not retained such money after garnishment, therefore due demand on execution was not an essential fact in scire facias against it. The plaintiff urges that it would be an idle ceremony to make demand on execution in such case, and that the only proper procedure was to proceed against the Company directly in an action of scire facias. In other words, when, in" an action, a debt due a defendant, or *394

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Bluebook (online)
116 A. 878, 97 Conn. 387, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-weisman-conn-1922.