Potter v. Whitten

155 S.W. 80, 170 Mo. App. 108, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 314
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 80 (Potter v. Whitten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Whitten, 155 S.W. 80, 170 Mo. App. 108, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 314 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

[120]*120OPINION.

FARRINGTON, J.

(after stating the facts).— Appellant contends that there was such question raised by the reply of the plaintiff as could not be brought into and tried in a garnishment proceeding. It is true that garnishment proceedings in this State are purely and strictly legal proceedings, and it is not permissible to garnish a fund which is subject to indefinite contingencies, trust agreements and relations, or that has to be arrived at in an equitable proceeding to determine the amount that would be coming to the judgment debtor. Again, as a general proposition it may be said that the judgment creditor can have no greater rights against the garnishee than did the judgment debtor. This, however, is subject to the exception of fraud, and it has been so held in this State. [McDaniel v. Bryan, 123 Mo. App. 640, 643, 100 S. W. 1103; Holmes Organ Co. v. Pettitt, 34 Mo. App. 536, 539; Epstein v. Hammerslough Clothing Co., 67 Mo. App. 221; Gregg v. Bank, 80 Mo. 251; Eyerman v. Krieckhaus, 7 Mo. App. 455; Lee v. Tabor, 8 Mo. 322; Humphreys v. Milling Co., 98 Mo. 542, 10 S. W. 140; Holker v. Howendobler, 143 Mo. 80, 44 S. W. 794; Well & Wiggins Gro. Co. v. Clark’s Executrix, 79 Mo. App. 401; Hungerford v. Greengard, 95 Mo. App. 653, 69 S. W. 602; Donk Bros. Coal and Coke Co. v. Kinealy, 81 Mo. App. 646; Doggett v. Insurance Co., 19 Mo. 201; Dunlap v. Mitchell, 80 Mo. App. 393.] In McDaniel v. Bryan, supra, it is held that garnishment is the proper remedy where the debtor of a fraudulent grantee is summoned as garnishee to pay the debt of the fraudulent grantor. The law seems to be well settled in this State that a judgment creditor may pursue the funds in the hands of a third person who is a bailee or transferee or assignee to try the question of a fraudulent transfer in a garnishment proceeding; and all the cases we have examined arising in Missouri, ex[121]*121cept the case of McDaniel v. Bryan, supra, are cases where the relation of debtor and creditor did not exist, the relation of bailee, assignee, custodian, etc., being the relation that existed in those cases. However, in the McDaniel case the money was garnished in the hands of Godfrey and was dne from Godfrey as the proceeds of a sale of certain land which the judgment debtor had fraudulently conveyed to his wife, so that the relation of debtor and creditor seems to have existed, and the court held that the question could be tried in a garnishment proceeding/ It is true, the case of Himstedt v. German Bank, 46 Ark. 537, holds that unless the bank had knowledge or notice at the time of taking the deposit that it was fraudulent, it cannot be summoned in a garnishment proceeding after it has in good faith established the relation of debtor and creditor. We also find a case decided in Pennsylvania, Bingham v. Lamping, 26 Pa. St. 340, 67 Am. Dec. 418, which indicates that a carrier of goods after having made the contract of carriage in.good faith and without notice cannot be summoned as a garnishee on a judgment against the consignor.

An examination of our statute (Sec. 2413, R. S. 1909) discloses that the field for garnishment is a wide one where a party has money or property in his hands belonging to a judgment debtor, or is the debtor of a judgment debtor. There is no question in the present case but that attachment would lie for the shares of stock in the Whitten-Chesley Mines Company had they been turned over to the wife (instead of the money derived from the sale of said stock) and had she placed them in the custody of the garnishee; nor is there any question but that a levy could have been made on the bank in this case had it been merely the custodian of some property which had been fraudulently turned over to the wife; and we can see no difference so far as this case is concerned between a debtor who makes a contract to pay certain money [122]*122and a bailee who makes a contract to return certain property. The contractual relation so far as the debt- or or bailee is concerned is the same, one agreeing to- pay money or to pay a debt, and the other to return specific articles. The courts have held that property in,the hands of a bailee or a fraudulent transferee is subject to garnishment, and as section 2413, R. S. 1909, is as wide in its scope in relation to debtors as to other custodians or holders of property, garnishment should be a remedy in the one relation as in the other. Besides, acting on the theory on which this case was tried, namely, that the transfer was fraudulent, if it was, then there are no equities or' contingencies to be worked out; if it is fraudulent, it is void, and the sole question tried was whether this money belonged to the judgment debtor; if the transfer to the wife was fraudulent, it did; if not fraudulent, the garnishee owed the judgment debtor nothing. The jury passed upon this question under the instructions and found that the transfer was fraudulent and that the money was therefore the property of the husband.

Appellant contends that because it did not know of the fraudulent character of this money when its relation of debtor and creditor with Vera E. Whitten arose, it is not subject to garnishment. However, as stated in Freeman on Executions (2 Ed.), section 159, “It is not the taking of a fraudulent transfer, but the reception of property, which makes the garnishee answerable. Hence he may exonerate himself by showing that the property of which he received a fraudulent mortgage or bill of sale never came into his possession, or having come into his possession, was returned to the defendant before the garnishment was served, or being an animal, has died, and is therefore not subject to execution.”

A case closely in point is that of Kesler v. St. John, 22 Iowa, 565. Some corn was purchased of J, [123]*123but the purchaser was afterwards told that it belonged to J’s son to whom a note was given for part of the purchase price, and the purchaser being garnished under an execution against J nevertheless paid the note to J’s son. It was held that the purchaser was answerable on garnishment on proof being made that the note was taken in the name of J’s son to defraud the creditors of J.

In Waples on Attachment and Garnishment, at page 200, it is said: “A deposit to the credit of a second person to whom the bank acknowledges an indebtedness by a certificate may be subjected to a garnishment in the hands of the bank.” And in Drake on Attachment (7 Ed.), section 458: UA funda-, mental doctrine of garnishment is, that the plaintiff does not acquire any greater rights against the garnishee than the defendant himself possesses. When, therefore, the attachment plaintiff seeks to avail himself of the rights of the defendant against the,garnishee, his recourse against the latter is limited by the extent of the garnishee’s liability to the defendant. This principle is subject, however, to an exception, where the garnishee is in possession of effects of the defendant under a fraudulent transfer from the latter. There, though the defendant would have no claim against the garnishee, yet a creditor of the defendant can subject the effects in the garnishee’s hands to his attachment. ’ ’

Our conclusion is that appellant’s contention on this phase of the case is not well founded.

The second assignment of error that Vera E. Whitten should have been made a party under section 2439, E. S.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 80, 170 Mo. App. 108, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-whitten-moctapp-1913.