Johnson v. Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc.

54 N.W.2d 1, 237 Minn. 117, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 704
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 29, 1952
Docket35,716
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 54 N.W.2d 1 (Johnson v. Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc., 54 N.W.2d 1, 237 Minn. 117, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 704 (Mich. 1952).

Opinions

Christianson, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment for plaintiff entered against the garnishee, State Bank of Loretto, hereinafter referred to as the bank.

[118]*118The essential facts are as follows: Defendant Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc., maintained a checking account with the bank. On October 14, 1948, the Gartner Refrigeration Company brought an action against said defendant and served a garnishment summons on the bank garnisheeing defendant’s checking account. The bank disclosed that it owed defendant $2,770.42. Thereafter, the bank permitted defendant to continue to draw checks on its account and to make deposits in a normal manner. On one or more occasions during the interval between the date of such garnishment and July 19, 1949, defendant’s account was overdrawn but was subsequently replenished by new deposits.

On July 19, 1949, plaintiff, having instituted an action against defendant, also garnished the bank. The bank disclosed the sum of $2,615.11 owing to defendant at the time of such garnishment. On July 20, 1949, plaintiff again garnished the bank, but it is clear that the amount disclosed as due defendant at that time was of the funds garnished the day before, and plaintiff makes no claim on appeal to the sum disclosed pursuant to that garnishment. Subsequent to plaintiff’s second garnishment on July 20, 1949, the bank again permitted defendant to draw upon its account and make new deposits. Between that day and August 9, 1949, when plaintiff again served a garnishment summons on the bank, defendant’s entire account had, at one point, been withdrawn. However, new deposits brought the account up to $639.37 at the time plaintiff’s third garnishment was run, and that sum was disclosed by the bank as then due defendant.

In its disclosures the bank claimed a right of setoff with respect to each of plaintiff’s three garnishments by virtue of the $2,770.42 Gartner garnishment served on October 14, 1948. Thereafter, pursuant to M. S. A. 571.51, plaintiff filed a supplemental complaint against the bank seeking judgment against the bank for the total amount disclosed in the three separate garnishments. The bank answered, contending in effect that, since each of plaintiff’s garnishments was for a sum less than the prior $2,770.42 Gartner gar[119]*119nishment, plaintiff had garnished nothing and that his supplemental complaint should be dismissed.

On September 28, 1950, Gartner Refrigeration Company secured a judgment against defendant Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc., for $1,725.03, and had execution issued thereon. On the same day, the Hennepin county sheriff levied on the garnishee bank and collected the full amount of said judgment. On the same date, plaintiff obtained and entered judgment against defendant for $8,200, but because of payments defendant subsequently made there was a balance of $5,330 remaining unpaid thereon when the present proceedings came on for trial before the referee designated by the district court.

The referee, before whom the matter was heard, concluded that the bank, in permitting defendant to withdraw the entire sum originally garnished under the Gartner garnishment, had no right of setoff against plaintiff by reason thereof, and that plaintiff’s first garnishment impounded the entire balance of $2,615.11 in defendant’s account on July 19, 1949, free from any claim by the bank. The second garnishment served on July 20, 1949, was found to have impounded nothing, inasmuch as the credits of that date were the same as those plaintiff impounded the day before. However, since defendant’s account was again entirely withdrawn and new deposits made before plaintiff’s third garnishment was served, the referee found that it impounded the $639.37 which the bank disclosed as being due defendant on August 9, 1949. The referee’s findings and conclusions were approved and confirmed by the district court, and thereafter both the bank and plaintiff moved in the alternative for amended findings or a new trial. Both motions were denied by the referee, and his orders denying the same were confirmed by the district court. Judgment thereafter was entered against the bank pursuant to the referee’s findings in the respective amounts disclosed under the first and third garnishments, totaling the sum of $3,254.48, together with interest and costs. The bank alone appeals from the judgment.

The bank argues that the Gartner garnishment was entitled to priority and that it gave the bank a right of setoff against plaintiff’s [120]*120subsequent garnishments notwithstanding the fact that the amount impounded under the Gartner garnishment was later withdrawn. The bank further argues that, since it has now been discharged from the Gartner garnishment, plaintiff’s first garnishment was effective only to the extent of $890.08, and that it in turn gave rise to a right of setoff against plaintiff’s third garnishment, which impounded the balance of $639.87 in defendant’s account at that time. Thus, the bank contends that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for only $890.08, which is the difference between the $1,725.03 it paid on the Gartner execution and the $2,615.11 in the account when plaintiff’s first garnishment was served.

The questions presented for decision are (1) whether the Gartner garnishment was entitled to priority, and (2) whether the bank acquired a right of setoff against plaintiff’s subsequent garnishments by reason of the Gartner garnishment and its release of the garnished funds.

M. S. A. 571.12, subd. 1, provides:

“* * * service of the garnishee summons upon the garnishee shall attach and bind, to respond to final judgment in the action, * * * all indebtedness owing by him to the defendant at the time of such service.”2 (Italics supplied.)

Thus, this court has described a garnishment as a “judicial warning to the garnishee” not to pay or restore property to the defendant, with the admonition that if he does so he may subject himself to judgment. Watson v. Goldstein, 176 Minn. 18, 25, 222 N. W. 509, 511.

In the instant case, the bank disregarded the judicial warning given in the Watson case. It did not impound the garnished funds until final judgment, as the statute requires, but rather it permitted defendant to withdraw all the credits which had been attached by the Gartner garnishment and by plaintiff’s first gar[121]*121nishment. In paying over the garnished funds to defendant’s order, the bank did so at its own risk and was not relieved from liability to Gartner or to plaintiff thereby.3

The bank’s contention that the Gartner garnishment had a priority over plaintiff’s subsequent garnishments must fall, in view of the well-settled principle that a garnishment impounds only those assets in possession of the garnishee at the time of the service of the garnishment summons. It does not reach assets subsequently acquired by the garnishee. Gilloley v. Sampson, 203 Minn. 233, 238, 281 N. W. 3, 5; 3 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 3957; M. S. A. 571.42. Thus, the deposits which defendant made after service of the Gart-ner garnishment were not impounded by it, but rather were subject to subsequent garnishment by defendant’s creditors. To hold otherwise would be to allow any undischarged garnishment of a bank account to remain a shield against other creditors of the depositor to the extent of the first garnishment, notwithstanding the fact that subsequent deposits are made.

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Johnson v. Dutch Mill Dairy, Inc.
54 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.W.2d 1, 237 Minn. 117, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-dutch-mill-dairy-inc-minn-1952.