Hurley v. Gaertner (In Re Hurley)

148 B.R. 298, 24 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1418, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1803, 1992 WL 332229
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 13, 1992
Docket19-01998
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 B.R. 298 (Hurley v. Gaertner (In Re Hurley)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurley v. Gaertner (In Re Hurley), 148 B.R. 298, 24 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1418, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1803, 1992 WL 332229 (Ill. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Hon. RONALD S. BARLIANT, Bankruptcy Judge.

Two motions before this Court arise out of the premature payment of funds by a garnishee-bank to a judgment creditor-gar-nishor before a judgment had been entered in the garnishment proceeding. The garnishee-bank filed a motion requesting that this Court either approve the payment nunc •pro tunc or require the judgment creditor-garnishor to return the funds. The judgment debtor has moved to quash the garnishment summons and declare the garnishment proceedings void ab initio. At issue are whether the judgment creditor properly initiated the garnishment proceeding and, if so, what effect the premature payment by the garnishee has in the proceeding. For the reasons stated below, both parties’ motions are denied. However, because there is no reason to withhold judgment in garnishment at this time, this Court will enter such judgment and credit the payments previously made by the garnishee.

*300 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Carol Hurley (“Hurley”), a chapter 11 debtor, brought an adversary proceeding in this Court and obtained a $25,000 judgment against Dr. Gene Gaertner (“Gaertner”), on April 28, 1992. Gaertner filed a notice of appeal within ten days of this judgment; but, Gaertner failed to obtain a stay of proceedings to enforce the judgment. Hurley filed with the clerk of this Court an affidavit stating Hurley’s belief that Affiliated Bank (“Affiliated”) was indebted to Gaertner or had in its possession property belonging to Gaertner. Together with the affidavit, Hurley filed written interrogatories directed at Affiliated regarding Affiliated’s indebtedness to Gaertner. Upon receipt of the affidavit and interrogatories, the clerk of this Court issued and served a non-wage garnishment summons on Affiliated. Thus, Gaertner is the judgment debt- or, Hurley is the judgment creditor-gar-nishor and Affiliated is the garnishee.

Affiliated answered the interrogatories that it was indebted to Gaertner in the amount of $25,000 by reason of a checking account. By letter that same day, May 29, 1992, Affiliated notified Gaertner of the garnishment and informed Gaertner that Affiliated was obligated to debit Gaertner’s account $25,000. By this letter, Affiliated also informed Gaertner that it would hold the funds until judgment was entered or until further hearing. Gaertner did not seek a stay pending appeal, even after learning of the garnishment of his account. Also on this day, Affiliated wrote to counsel for Hurley, acknowledging receipt of the garnishment summons and stating that Affiliated would remit the, withheld funds upon receipt of a “Satisfaction of Judgment filed with the court, after the court date”. The author of the letter undoubtedly had in mind a satisfaction of the judgment in the garnishment proceeding that might have been entered after the “court date” in accordance with the garnishment summons.

Although this Court yet had not entered a judgment in garnishment, Hurley, through counsel, delivered to Affiliated a release of judgment dated June 3, 1992. This document on its face purported to release the underlying April 28th judgment against Gaertner, not any garnishment judgment against Affiliated. Upon receipt of the release, Affiliated issued a cashier’s check in the amount of the judgment plus interest set forth in the release ($26,155.84) made payable jointly to Hurley and her counsel. Hurley then distributed these funds to her creditors pursuant to her confirmed plan of reorganization.

After Affiliated disbursed the funds to Hurley, and after Hurley distributed the funds under her plan, Gaertner received a bank statement from Affiliated indicating the debit from his checking account. Ga-ertner then demanded that Affiliated reimburse his account because no order had been entered by this Court allowing the disbursement of funds to Hurley. Affiliated in turn demanded Hurley to return the funds to Affiliated. Hurley has refused Affiliated’s demand and, meanwhile, Gaert-ner’s appeal of the underlying judgment is pending.

II. ARGUMENTS

Affiliated’s argument is straightforward; Affiliated argues it is not at fault. The premature payment was either Gaertner’s fault for not obtaining a stay of enforcement of the judgment pending appeal or it was Hurley’s fault for delivering a “release” of a judgment in garnishment when no judgment in garnishment had been entered by this Court. If Gaertner is at fault, Hurley keeps the money. If Hurley is at fault, Hurley should be liable to reimburse Gaertner.

Hurley’s argument is similar; she, too, argues it is not her fault. Gaertner never sought to stay enforcement of Hurley’s judgment and Hurley proceeded to garnish Gaertner’s account. Hurley does not object to a nunc 'pro tunc order authorizing the premature payment made by Affiliated; however, Hurley objects to returning funds to Affiliated. Affiliated asked for a release of judgment and Hurley delivered a release of judgment, albeit a release of the wrong judgment. If Affiliated is deemed to have prematurely paid Hurley, this is *301 the risk Affiliated assumed by not requiring an appropriate order by this Court.

Gaertner, not surprisingly, argues that he, too, is not at fault. Gaertner argues that Hurley improperly initiated garnishment proceedings. Hurley admits that she initiated garnishment by summons pursuant to F.R.C.P. 64 and, according to Gaertner, Hurley should have initiated garnishment pursuant to F.R.C.P. 69(a). Gaertner maintains that Rule 69(a) required execution on Hurley’s judgment to have been initiated by a federal writ of execution, as this Court had not ordered otherwise. Alternatively, if state law applied, a certified copy of the judgment should have been delivered to the sheriff or other proper officer. Because Hurley failed to properly initiate garnishment, Gaertner argues that he did not need to post a supersedeas bond or other security to stay proceedings. Moreover, in Gaertner’s view, Affiliated was obligated by statute to hold the funds pending further court order and he was entitled to receive notice before Affiliated paid Hurley. Upon receiving such notice, Gaertner would have prevented this Court from entering judgment in garnishment by pleading Hurley’s jurisdictional defects.

Each party’s conclusion regarding fault is flawed. No party is without fault. Hurley delivered a “release” of the underlying judgment instead of a release of judgment in garnishment. Affiliated paid out the funds based on this facially inapplicable release and without obtaining an order from this Court authorizing payment. Ga-ertner elected to appeal the underlying judgment without obtaining a stay and instead waited to spring an alleged jurisdictional defect to thwart garnishment. If this Court sought to resolve this dispute in favor of the party without fault, there could be no winner.

III. ANALYSIS

Gaertner’s main argument is that the garnishment proceedings are void ab initio because Hurley improperly relied on F.R.C.P. 64

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Related

Reedy v. Reedy (In Re Reedy)
247 B.R. 742 (E.D. Tennessee, 1999)
Hurley v. Gaertner (In Re Hurley)
158 B.R. 115 (N.D. Illinois, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
148 B.R. 298, 24 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1418, 1992 Bankr. LEXIS 1803, 1992 WL 332229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurley-v-gaertner-in-re-hurley-ilnb-1992.