Nash v. S. M. Braman Co.

297 N.W. 755, 210 Minn. 196, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 25, 1941
DocketNo. 32,738.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 N.W. 755 (Nash v. S. M. Braman Co.) 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
Nash v. S. M. Braman Co., 297 N.W. 755, 210 Minn. 196, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 738 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

Holt, Justice.

H. H. Nash sued S. M. Braman, doing business as S. M. Braman Company, in the district court of Lyon county, this state, wherein, upon stipulation, judgment against defendant was rendered October 80, 1939, for $1,032.70. In that action plaintiff had filed an affidavit for garnishment of the trustee of the Chicago & North Western Railway Company on March 28, 1939, and on the same day issued the summons, complaint attached, and served the garnishee summons, upon the station agent of the garnishee at Marshall, in said county, and mailed the summons and complaint attached, together with a copy of the garnishee summons with proof of service thereof to the sheriff of Hennepin county for service upon defendant. The sheriff received the documents March 29 and served them on defendant March 31, 1939. On April 6, 1939, defendant appeared generally and demanded that venue be changed to Hennepin county, his place of residence. The clerk, pursuant to the demand, transmitted the files to the district court of Hennepin county; but that court, on plaintiff’s motion, remanded the cases to Lyon county, for the convenience of witnesses. The disclosure was set for April 25, and the garnishee disclosed nothing due. Plaintiff, on December 22, 1939, filed a supplemental complaint in the garnishee proceeding. Issue was joined by the garnishee.

By written assignment dated March 29, 1939, defendant Braman, for value, assigned and transferred to Fourth Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis $2,185 of any amounts then due him *198 from the garnishee. This assignment was delivered to the bank in the morning of March 30, 1939, and thereafter the bank, for value, assigned and transferred the same to intervener J. B. Niles, who is now the owner thereof.

On March 27, 1939, Boy Courteau and Louis Trosin served summons and complaint in three actions in the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis against S. M. Braman, and in the one for which judgment was entered July 7, 1939, for $402.43, an affidavit for garnishment of the trustee of the Chicago & North Western Bail-way Company was filed, and the garnishment summons served upon the garnishee during the forenoon of March 30, 1939. In the other two actions in said court, one for $430.32 and one for $515.40, the affidavits for garnishment were filed and the garnishee summons were served on the garnishee on March 31, 1939.

There were subsequent suits and garnishments in Winona county, and in Iowa, but there is no need to refer to them since the only parties involved in this appeal are Nash, the respondent, and Niles and Courteau and Trosin, the appellants. All, however, joined in a stipulation, dated February 9, 1940, and filed in the district court of Lyon county in the Nash case, that the venue be changed in all the actions and in the ancillary garnishment proceedings mentioned to the district court of Brown county, and “that the garnishment and ancillary complaint proceedings may be set for trial and determined by the Honorable A. B. Gislason, Judge of said District Court.” The clerks of the different courts transmitted the files accordingly. The trial took place, and the court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law August 12, 1940. The court found that on March 28, 1939, there Avas due the sum of $3,480.01 from the garnishee to defendant Braman; and concluded that, first, Nash Avas entitled to judgment against the garnishee for $1,079.14, then intervener J. B. Niles for $2,185.00, and the interveners Courteau and Trosin for the balance of $215.87. The interveners separately moved for amended findings or a neAV trial. The motions were denied, except this was added to the findings filed August 12, 1940:

*199 “That prior to June 26, 1940, the plaintiffs Corteau and Trosin filed supplemental complaints in intervention in the action wherein H. H. Nash is plaintiff, and on June 26, 1940, the plaintiffs Courteau and Trosin and James B. Niles made a motion before this Court for a dismissal of the garnishment proceedings in the H. H. Nash action on the ground that the Court had no jurisdiction over the subject matter of said action, that the garnishment affidavit was filed before any summons or complaint had issued, and that said proceedings were in all things void on their face.”

The learned trial court correctly stated:

“The court had jurisdiction over the person of the defendant after the service on him on March 31st, but that did not affect the status of the fatally defective garnishment. These became operative only when the garnishee appearing in the case on April 25.”

But the question remains: Could such fatal defect be cured by the garnishee appearing on April 25 so as to relate back to March 28, notwithstanding the valid garnishments of Courteau and Trosin of March 30 and 31; and the assignment of March 30 of the sum of $2,185 of the amount due to defendant from the garnishee, now held by Niles? The respondent, Nash, took the position that appellants Avere not entitled to urge defects in his garnishment proceeding, because they had transferred their actions to the district court of Brown county and intervened in respondent’s case by therein filing complaints in intervention Avithout therein attacking his garnishment. That is true, but from the amendment added to the findings it does appear that, while the cause Avas on trial and before its submission for decision, appellants squarely raised the legal question that the service of the garnishee on March 28 Avas not valid because Avhen the affidavit Avas filed and garnishee summons Avas served on the garnishee the summons in the main action had not been issued to the sheriff for service. Our decisions are clear that no property or credits of a defendant in the hands of a garnishee are laid hold of by the service of a garnishee summons on the garnishee unless there is a-main action pending *200 or unless the summons therein is issued and in the hands of the proper officer for service. In Borgen v. Corty, 181 Minn. 349, 232 N. W. 512, we held, in case of an attachment, that the summons must be issued at or before the time the writ of attachment is levied, and that to constitute issuance of summons it must be either served or delivered to the proper officer for service. In Chapman v. Foshay, 184 Minn. 318, 321, 238 N. W. 637, it was held that the “issuance of the summons” has the same meaning in garnishments as in attachments. The court followed and applied the same rule in the garnishment of Melin v. Aronson, 205 Minn. 353, 357, 285 N. W. 830. Here Nash served the garnishee summons on the garnishee a day before the summons in the main action was in the hands of the sheriff for service. That defendant made a general appearance and demanded a change of venue and the garnishee appeared and disclosed on April 25 could not affect or cut off rights which in the meantime had lawfully impounded the property and credits of defendant in the hands of the garnishee.

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Related

Northern National Bank v. Northern Minnesota National Bank
70 N.W.2d 118 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1955)
Braman v. Wall
7 N.W.2d 924 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 N.W. 755, 210 Minn. 196, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-s-m-braman-co-minn-1941.