Margarum v. Moon

53 A. 179, 63 N.J. Eq. 586, 18 Dickinson 586, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 10, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 53 A. 179 (Margarum v. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margarum v. Moon, 53 A. 179, 63 N.J. Eq. 586, 18 Dickinson 586, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

Margarían, the complainant, resides in Trenton, is married,, living with and supporting a family, and not owning $200 worth of personal property. He is a -servant of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, which company owes him for wages the sum of $100.

Walter E. Moon, the defendant, is also a resident of this state. Margarían owes Moon the sum of $66.61. According to the affidavits Moon has assigned his claim against Margarían to-[588]*588George 0. Smith, attorney for the Delaware Mercantile Company, of Harrisburg. The assignee has attached, in the courts of West Virginia, the wages due to Margarum from the railroad •company. The assignment is, in terms, absolute, the consideration for the same being that Moon was to receive one-half of any amount recovered by the assignee.

It is obvious that the purpose of the assignee, in obtaining the assignment, was to evade the statute of this state, which exempts property of a debtor from execution to an amount up to the value of $300.

Mr. Moon, in his affidavit, disclaims any knowledge that attachment suits have been begun in the courts of West Virginia, or that he has any control over such suits. He denies that he has combined with the company, or with Smith, for the purpose •of evading the statute laws of the State of New Jersey, or of depriving Margarum of his wages.

The jurisdiction of courts of equity to act in personam, upon persons within their jurisdictions, by restraining them from using the courts of another state to execute an inequitable purpose, must be regarded as settled. 1 High Inj. § 103.

;-The injunction is not directed to the foreign tribunal, but to the party within the jurisdiction of the equity court. This judicial power was exercised in the case of Cunningham v. Butler, 142 Mass. 47. In that case a citizen of Massachusetts, with knowledge that his debtor residing there had stopped payment, and anticipating proceedings in insolvency against him, made .an assignment of his claim to a citizen of New York, without consideration; and the latter, before proceedings in insolvenejr were begun, brought an action upon the claim in New York, and attached property of the debtor there. The Massachusetts court, on a bill filed in equity by the assignee in insolvency, restrained the creditor from prosecuting the action to judgment, the court having found that the creditors still had control over such action.

The exercise of the injunctive power in this case was held to be constitutional when the case came before the supreme court of the United States. Sub nom. Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U. S. 107.

[589]*589In Keyser v. Rice, 47 Md. 203, an injunction was supported restraining a creditor, residing in Maryland, from further prosecuting in Piedmont, West Virginia, an attachment by which he sought to recover wages due to his debtor, also residing in Maryland, from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. In Snook v. Snetzer, 25 Ohio St. 516, a similar exertion of theinjunctive power by a court of equity was approved by the supreme court of Ohio. Creditor and debtor were residents of the State of Ohio. The debtor was the head of a family, and wages due him from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company were garnished in West Virginia. In both cases the proceedings-in the foreign jurisdiction were instituted to evade the Exemption law of the state in which creditor and debtor were domiciled..

Mr. High states the doctrine to be that where a creditor and debtor are both citizens and residents in the same state, and the-creditor institutes an action of attachment or garnishee proceedings in another state, to reach credits due the debtor there, which would have been exempt from attachment or judicial process under the laws of the state where both parties were domiciled,, the creditor may be enjoined from further prosecuting his action, in the foreign state, it being regarded as an effort to evade the laws of the state of his domicile. High Inj. § 106. The cases in which the exertion of this injunctive power has been exercised to restrain such proceedings in the foreign jurisdiction, under-such conditions, are cited by Mr. High (High Inj. § 105) and by Mr. Waples. Wapl. Att. § 713.

Therefore, where it appears that the resident creditor is prosecuting a proceeding in another state for the purpose of depriving a resident debtor of the benefit of the exemption provided by the-law of their domicile, the power of this court to restrain such proceeding seems to be plenary.

But it is said on the part of the creditor that, under attachment suits in this state, wages are not exempt; that only in proceedings to make a debt upon execution issued upon a judgment is the debtor entitled to an exemption of personal property of all kinds to the value of $200. But the fact that the debtor’s wages might be attachable in this state, is no answer to the-debtor’s right to an injunction; for the only way his property [590]*590could be reached in this state would be upon an execution, as no attachment can issue against him so long as he remains a non-absconding resident in this state. Nor can the wages be reached, under the act of 1901 (P. Li of 1901 p. 372), upon an execution, except upon an order that such installment of said wages as a judicial officer shall determine shall be paid from time to time. This judicial discretion is vested in the judge, so that not all the wages shall be garnished and the debtor be at once deprived of his wages, but that, in ease of the debtor and his family, only such portion of the debt shall be paid, from time to time, as will leave the debtor’s family unimpoverished. This scheme is quite variant from the one put in operation in West Virginia.

It is also insisted that the complainant is not injured by the attachment, because he can, notwithstanding the pendency of that proceeding, recover his wages from the garnishee.

The point is made that such an action here is not subject to a plea in abatement becarise of the pendency of* such foreign suit.

While an action here will not be abated by the plea of the pendency of an action between the same parties for the same cause of action in another state, yet the domestic action may be stayed or suspended until the foreign action is discontinued. Kerr v. Willilts, 19 Vr. 79. Where a defendant- in such a suit has been subjected to garnishee process, it would be strange if the court would not take cognizance of a proceeding which had already ñxed the debt in favor of the attaching creditor. Wallace v. McConnell, 13 Pet. 136, 150.

The same objection against the injunctions which have been allowed in the cited cases could have been interposed in those cases, but were not; and if they had been, they would have been properly overruled as utterly unsubstantial.

While I have found no answer to the complainant’s prayer for injunction in the points already cited, nevertheless I am unable to see how a writ can go, in view of the defendant’s sworn statement that he has made an absolute assignment of his claim and has no control over the attachment proceedings being prosecuted in West Virginia.

As this injunction is aimed at the resident creditor, and would [591]

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 179, 63 N.J. Eq. 586, 18 Dickinson 586, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margarum-v-moon-njch-1902.