Rome R. v. Richmond & D. R.

60 F. 43, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2715

This text of 60 F. 43 (Rome R. v. Richmond & D. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rome R. v. Richmond & D. R., 60 F. 43, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2715 (circtndga 1894).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge,

Attachments were sued out against the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, a foreign corporation, in suits brought against it, and summons of garnishment were served on the Georgia Railroad & Banking Company and the Georgia Railroad, lessee. Defendant filed answers acknowledging indebtedness; the answer being in accordance with the terms of the act of the legislature of Georgia of October, 1885, which will be hereafter discussed. The questions raised in this matter involve the construction of the statutes of the state of Georgia in reference to the right of garnishees to have their expenses for making answers taxed as costs in the case in which garnishment is issued. There were, up to October, 1885, provisions in the statute by which garnishment might* be dissolved by defendant, by giving bond in the terms of the statute; and thereby the garnishee was relieved from all further liability with reference to the garnishment, and no answer of any kind was required to be filed. By the terms of the act alluded to, approved October 15, 1885, provision is made for the dissolution of garnishments by the giving of bond conditioned for the payment of the judgments that-should be rendered on the garnishment, instead of bonds conditioned for the payment of the amount which might be recovered in the principal suit, or the amount due on the judgment, accordingly as the garnishment was sued out pending suit or after judgment was obtained, as had been theretofore the law in Georgia. This statute of 1885 further provides (see Laws Ga. 1884-85, p. 96) that:

“The garnishee shall file his answer stating what amount he was indebted to defendant or what effects he had in his hands belonging to- the defendant at the time of the service of such summons, and what he had become indebted to the defendant, or what effects had come into his hands belonging to the defendant, between the time of the service of such summons and the making of his answer, and in the event the court shall decide that the fund or property in the hands of the garnishee were subject'to garnishment, had the garnishment not been dissolved, then the court shall render judgment against the defendant and his securities.”

The difference between the old and new law being that under the old law the bond to dissolve was conditioned to pay the debt [45]*45which, might he found to he due to the plaintiff by the defendant, and by the act of 1885 the bond is conditioned to pay the amount that might ultimately be determined to be in the hands of the garnishee, or be due by him to the defendant; the act providing, further, that the garnishee should be required to answer the garnishment, this latter provision being rendered necessarv in order to ascertain the extent of liability on the bond. In this case, notwithstanding the fact that the garnishment was dissolved, the garnishee filed answer, being advised by counsel that it was necessary to do so under the provisions of the act of the legislature just alluded to. The provision of the Code of Georgia (section 3549) Avith reference to the right of garnishees to haAre costs is as follows:

"In all cases where process'of garnishment shall bo served upon any person, and such person shall mate a true answer to the garnishment, as now required by law, and shall pay the sum due to the defendant, into the court, or shall turn over and deliver up any personal property of the defendant’s that may have been in his .possession, as required by Jaw, or shall answer truly that he owes the defendant nothing, if the garnishee shall have to incur any expense in making his or her answer to the garnishment, or in turning over said personal property, the amount so incurred, shall be taxed in the bill of costs, under the approval of the court, and be paid, by the party cast in the suit, as other costs are now paid.”

It is claimed that under this section, there are now hut three .cases in which a garnishee may have taxed in the costs of his expenses in answering, namely: First, where the garnishee makes a true answer as now required by law, and shall pay the sum due to the defendant into the court; second, where like answer is made, and the garnishee shall turn over or' deliver up any personal property of the defendant that he may have in his possession, as required by law; and, third, where the garnishee answers truly that he owes the defendant nothing. At the time of the passage of this act, (1873,) one or the other of these -three things it Avas the duty of the garnishee to do; and it is 'as if there had been a proviso to the statute'that a garnishee should have his expenses for answering a garnishment, provided he did his duty in the premises. The allowance to him is for the expense of filing his answer, and the qualification or condition is that he himself complies with the law. It is not for bringing the sum due to the defendant into court, or for turning over and delivering up any personal property of the defendant, or for telling the truth in case the garnishee claims to owe nothing, that the allowance is made to him by the statute, hut it is for the expense of filing his answer; and this expression in the statute, which, it is claimed, embraces the only cases of the garnishee’s right to have his expenses allowed, is nothing more than a requirement that the garnishee must himself have complied with the law and its terms, as it then stood, before he could ask aid of the court to reimburse him for his outlay in answering. Now, the act of 1885 was passed, and by the terms of that act the garnishee was required to answer, notwithstanding the fact that the garnishment had , been dissolved; and if he answered that he owed the defendant, as in the case now before the court, the effect of the answer was simply [46]*46to enable the parties to determine the amount due on the garnishment, and which the bond to dissolve was conditioned to pay. The garnishee could not pay the money due into court, because, when the garnishment was dissolved, he had, presumably, already paid the money over to the defendant. The garnishee having been required by the terms of this last act to answer, notwithstanding the fact that the garnishment had been dissolved, and he had paid over whatever he owed to the defendant, can the garnishee have the expenses for answering allowed, iinder the term of the section of the Code of G-eorgia above discussed? 31 the above construction of the connecting section of the Code of Georgia is correct, it seems entirely clear that he can. The allowance to him is for any expenses he may have incurred in making his answer to the garnishment; and when, by subsequent statute, the garnishee is required to answer in a manner and under circumstances not then provided for, it seems that the terms of the statute should apply to him, as much as to one who had been originally covered by it.

The next question raised here is that the act of 1885, by its terms, does not apply to garnishments by attachment. By the Code of Georgia, which was adopted in 1862, section 3582 provides, “In case where suit is pending or where judgment has been obtained, the plaintiff shall be entitled to process of garnishment in the following regulation;” and then follows the method of suing out garnishments. This is garnishment at common law. Garnishment at common law, it was provided by the Code, (section 3540,) might be dissolved, as has been stated, by giving bond for the payment of the amount due on the judgment, or which might be recovered in the action. By an act of March 4, 1869, it was provided that:

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Bluebook (online)
60 F. 43, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rome-r-v-richmond-d-r-circtndga-1894.