Miller v. Taylor

14 Tex. 538
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 Tex. 538 (Miller v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Taylor, 14 Tex. 538 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The first, and principal question to be determined, is, whether the garnishee could be held liable, under the circumstances of this case, upon the process issued from the Justice’s Court. And the better opinion, upon authority, seems to be, that he could not; by reason of the proceeding pending, or which was the same in effect as a proceeding pending, in another Court, not of concurrent, but of a different jurisdiction, at the time of suing out the process against the garnishee.

“ It is an invariable and indisputable principle, that a gar“nishee shall not be made to pay his debt twice. Conse- “ quently, when he is in such a situation that, if charged as garnishee, he cannot defend himself against a second payment “ to his creditor, he should not be charged.” (Drake on Attachment, Sec. 627.) This principle has been applied to cases where legal proceedings were pending against a garnishee at the suit of the defendant in the garnishment. And the doctrine has been held, that a garnishee cannot be charged on account of a debt, for the recovery of which an action, previously commenced by the defendant, is pending at the time of the garnishment. (Id.; and 5 New Hamp. 566.) But the prevailing doctrine, in the Courts of the several States, and the better opinion, seems to be, that the pendency of an action by the defendant against the garnishee, will not prevent the garnishee’s liability. It is so held in Pennsylvania, Alabama and Tennessee, and doubtless in other States. The Pennsylvania Court, acting, it is said, upon probably the first case in this country in which the question was involved, rejected the English doctrine that a debt in suit cannot be attached, as inapplicable here. That doctrine, in England, grew out of the fact, that [541]*541garnishment, there, is the offspring of special and local custom, and takes place in inferior Courts ; and the Courts of general jurisdiction will not permit suits depending before them to be affected by the process of inferior tribunals. (2 Dallas, 277; 2 Yeates, 190; Drake on Attachment, Sec. 636.) In Massachusetts, the liability of the garnishee, where an action, on behalf of the defendant, is pending against him, turns upon the state of the pleadings in the action, at the time of the garnishment. If the pleadings are in such a state that the garnishee can plead the garnishment in bar of the action, he can be charged; otherwise not. Thus, where the garnishee had been sued by the defendant, and, before the garnishment, the action had been referred by rule of Court, in which rule it was agreed that judgment should be entered up according to the report of the referees, and execution issued thereon, it was held that the garnishee could not be charged ; because, in that state of the case, no day of pleading remained for the garnishee, and the law furnished him no defence against the defendant’s demand of judgment. (3 Mass. R. 121.) The same rule was enforced in another case, but where the garnishment (as in this case) took place after an award, but before judgment rendered thereon. (18 Pick. 492; and see 4 Mass. R. 238; Drake on Attachment, Sec. 630, 631, 635.)

The general principle seems to be, that the pendency, in the same Court, of an action on behalf of the defendant, against the garnishee, will not preclude the garnishee’s being charged. But where the proceedings are in different jurisdictions; or where the action is pending in one Court, and the garnishment in another, and the Courts are of different jurisdictions, the rule appears to be different. Then the proceeding which was first instituted, will be sustained. (Id. Sec. 637.) Thus, in the case of Wallace v. McConnell, (13 Peters, R. 136,) where A sued B in the District Court of the United States, for the District of Alabama, and after the action was brought, B was summoned as garnishee of A, in a County Court of Alabama, and judgment was there rendered against him, and he pleaded [542]*542the judgment in bar of the action pending in the United States Court; the Court, on demurrer, held the plea bad. The Supreme Court say, “ The plea shows that the proceedings, on. “ the attachment, were instituted after the commencement of “this suit. The jurisdiction of the District Court of the “ United States, and the right of the plaintiff to prosecute his “ suit in that Court, having attached, that right could not be arrested or taken away by any proceeding in another Court. “ This would produce a collision in the jurisdiction of Courts, “ that would extremely embarrass the administration of jus- “ tice.” The Court, at the same, time, expressly recognize the principle, that if the garnishment had taken place before the action was brought, it would have been sufficient in abatement or bar, as the case might be. The attachment of the debt, in that case, in the hands of the defendant would fix it there, in favor of the attaching creditor. The creditor would acquire a lien upon the debt, binding upon the defendant, which every other Court would recognize; and the defendant could not pay it over, or, of course, assign it to another. The Court say, “ The rule must be reciprocal; and where the suit in one “ Court is commenced prior to the proceedings under the at- “ tachment in another Court, such proceedings cannot arrest “ the suit; and the maxim qui prior est tempore, potior estjure, “ must govern the case.” It has been made a question, whether a judgment debtor can be charged as garnishee of the judgment creditor. And on this point also there has been a conflict of opinions and decisions. But the better opinion, upon authority and reason, seems to be, that he can. (Drake on Attachment, 638 to 643, and cases cited.)

But it has been said, that the force of the reasons in support of this conclusion is lost, when the judgment is in one Court and the garnishment in another. (Id. Sec. 643.) The observation may, perhaps, be just, if the latter Court is a Court of a different and inferior jurisdiction; but upon that point it is not necessary to express an opinion.

It does not distinctly appear, nor is it perceived that it [543]*543makes any difference, in this case, whether there was a suit pending previous to the submission to arbitrators or not. The agreement to arbitrate was a proceeding, which, under the Statute, entitled the party in whose favor the award was made, to have it made the judgment of the Court; and the conflict of jurisdictions must necessarily be the same, whether the submission to arbitrators was in a case pending or not. The proceeding by garnishment was after the award, and before it was made the judgment of the Court; and it is clear, as well upon the authority of the Massachusetts cases cited, especially the case of McCaffrey v. Moore, (18 Pick. R. 492,) which is in point, as upon the doctrine maintained in the case of Wallace v. McConnell, the defendant in the award and judgment thereon rendered in the District Court, could not be charged as garnishee upon the process issued from the Justice’s Court. If the garnishment could have been interposed in any manner, to. preclude or postpone the rendition of judgment upon the award, it was not done or attempted. The judgment was rightly rendered upon the award. And the Court did not err in holding it valid and obligatory, notwithstanding the judgment rendered by the Justice in the matter of the garnishment» However that judgment might embarrass the garnishee, it could not impair the force of the judgment of the District Court rendered upon the award.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tex. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-taylor-tex-1855.