Olcott v. Guerinck

19 Ohio C.C. 32
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. 32 (Olcott v. Guerinck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olcott v. Guerinck, 19 Ohio C.C. 32 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Marvin, J.

The case of F. L. Olcott v. Bernard A.- Guerinck arises under the following state of fao ts:

Bernard Guerinck brought suit in the court of common pleas of this ocunty about the first of May, 1896, against the Elwood Stove &¡Stamping~Company, a foreign corporation'haviug its principal office and business in the state of Pennsylvania. This was an aotion for the recovery of money only, and, on proper affidavit for that purpose, an order of attachment’was issued in the aotion, and garnishee process was issued^and’served upon the said Olcott.

[33]*33The only service upon the corporation was by publication.' Later in the aoticn, other orders in garnishment were issued and served upon the same garnishee. He made answer as garnishee, which was unsatisfactory to the plaintiff; and thereupon, Guerick brought suit against Oleott before any final judgment was rendered in that attachment suit. This last suit was heard upon the evidence, and the court found that Oleott had money of the Stamping Company in his hands, applicable to the payment of any judgment which might be recovered by the plaintiff in the attachment suit. Thereafter, and before any judgment was rendered in the suit against Oleott, a final judgment was rendered in the attachment suit against the Stamping Company.

Following that, a motion for a new trial was filed, heard and overruled in the suit against the garnishee, and final judgment was rendered against him for the money found by the court to be in his hands applicable to the payment of the judgment in the attachment'suit, suoh sum being less than the amount for which judgment was rendered in the last named oase.

It is to reverse this judgment against the garnishee that this proceeding is brought, and it is brought under the provision of section 5551, Revised Statutes.

Section 5551, Revised Statutes, which, as has already been said, is the statute under which this suit was brought, reads:

“If the garnishee fail to appear and answer, or if he appear and answer, and his disclosure be not satisfactory to the plaintiff, or if he fails to comply with the order of the court to deliver the property and pay the money owing into oourt, or to give the undertaking required in the last section, the plaintiff may proceed against him by civil action; and-thereupon such proceedings may be had as in other actions, and judgment may be rendered in favor of the plaintiff for-the amount of property and credits of every kind of the defendant in the possession of the garnishee, and for what may appear tc be owing by him to the defendant, and for the-costs of the proceedings against the garnishee.”

Section 5553, Revised Statutes, reads as follows:

“Final judgment shall not be rendered against the garnishee until the action against the defendant in the attachment is determined.”

[34]*34Without stopping to read more of that section, the implication seems to be dear that the plaintiff in attachment need not wait until final judgment has been rendered in she attachment case before he may sue the garnishee, but final judgment shall not be rendered against the garnishee until the action against the defendant in attachment is determined.

In this action no final judgment was rendered until a ' final judgment had been rendered in the attachment case.

In Myers v. Smith, 29 Ohio St., 120, the fourth clause of the syllabus reads:

“The defendant in attachment cannot ask the discharge of the garnishees on the ground that their answer fails to show that they have property of the defendant in their hands subject to garnishment. The plaintiff is not concluded bv the answer of the garnishee, and if the disclosures in their answers are not satisfactory to him, he is authorized to prooeed against them by action on that ground.”

The fifth clause of the same syllabus reads:

“If the proceeding is purely in rem, and the jurisdiction depends on property of the defendant subject to the garnishment being in the hands of the garnishee, the fact that such property exists must be found before the suit in attachment cair be proceeded in to a final judgment.”

Section 5532, Revised Statutes, reads:

“The answer of the garnishee shall be mad9 before the clerk of the court of common pleas in the county in which he resides, or, if he resides out cf the state, before the clerk of the court of common pleas of the' county where he was served, or where the action is pending; a special ex. amination of the garnisüee shall be had, and actions against him under section 5551, shall be brought in the county in which he resides.”

From these sections of the statutes, and from the case of Myers v. Smith, supra, it seems dear that it was the intention of the legislature to provide that the suit against the garnishee might be brought and the faotT! ascertained whether there was anything owing by him to the defendant in attachment, or any properr,y*of defendant"infattaoh~ ment in his hands, and that thereafter final "judgment [35]*35might be rendered in the attachment case,and then the case against the garnishee proceed to final judgment.

There was, therefore, no error m holding that the case was not prematurely brought.

But it is said that the action against the garnishee could not be maintained, because of the fact that whatever there was in the hand3 of the garnishee, was an indebtedness by him to this Pennsylvania corporation. Service upon that corporation, as has already been said, was obtained by publication only. It is said that the situs of that indebtedness — the situs of the property, was not in Ohio, and that, therefore, nc proceeding in garnishment could hold the property or hold the debt which was due from the garnishee, if any was due, to the creditor in Pennsylvania — the corporation.

The question cf the situs of suoh a credit in favor of the foreign corporation against a resident of Ohio has been the subject of a great deal of litigation, and has been passed upon in various states. In this state, in the case of Owen v. Miller, 10 Ohio St., 136, this question was raised; and on page 143,in the opinion, this language is used:

“We are brought, then, to the simple question, whether the promissory note given for a debt being in New Jersey, and the makers of the note, or the debtors, residing in Ohio, the property was in New Jersey or Ohio? In substance, there is a sum of money in the.hands of one man, tc which another has title or claim, and the evidence of that title or claim is a promise in writing to pay the money. Upon principle it would seem clear, that the subject-matter to which the title or claim rdates is the property, and not the evidence showing the title or claim. ”

In the case of Root & McBride Bros. v. Davis et al., 51 Ohio St., 29, the’ court in discussing the question involved therein, uses the language that is claimed to imply, at least, that the situs of the property in a case like this would be where the creditor resides, and not where the debtor resides; the court uses this language on page 36:

“It may be conceded that the credits of a non-resident debtor, without personal service upon him, cannot be attached in this state, by merely serving the process of [36]

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Related

Myers v. Smith
29 Ohio St. 120 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)
Ford v. Detroit Dry Dock Co.
15 N.W. 509 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1883)
Cleveland Paper Co. v. Courier Co.
34 N.W. 556 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olcott-v-guerinck-ohiocirct-1899.