Rothschild v. Burton

25 N.W. 49, 57 Mich. 540, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 829
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 N.W. 49 (Rothschild v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rothschild v. Burton, 25 N.W. 49, 57 Mich. 540, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 829 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Sheewood, J.

On the 7th day of March, 1884, the defendant was indebted on an open account for goods sold and delivered to the firm of Rothschild & Sittig, composed of Raphael Rothschild and Charles Sittig, in the sum of $164.15. On that day Rothschild & Sittig assigned the account to the plaintiff. March 3,1884, Leopold Erstein and Marx Erstein, simple contract creditors of Rothschild & Sittig, commenced a suit by attachment against them in the Federal court in Detroit, and on the 17th of June, 1884, recovered judgment in their suit for $686.62.

Prior to the rendition of this judgment, and on the 25th day of April, 1884, they caused garnishee proceedings to be commenced against the defendant, Nathan Burton, who was served the same day with the writ of garnishment, and on the 21st day of May thereafter, defendant filed a disclosure admitting the indebtedness on the day of the service of the writ, but states that previous thereto he was notified of the assignment of such indebtedness to plaintiff by the assignors,, and that if such assignment wa^ valid, he did not, on the day the writ of garnishment was issued, owe to the firm of Rothschild'& Sittig any sum of money whatever. On the same day, after the disclosure was filed, the attorneys for the plaintiffs in attachment filed in the United States circuit court-[543]*543a demand for á statutory issue in tbe cause, and an issue was thereupon formed between the parties, whereunder said plaintiffs sought to recover the said indebtedness mentioned in the disclosure. The plaintiffs in the attachment proceeding claim the said assignment is fraudulent as against their right to have the indebtedness applied to the payment of their judgment against Kothschild & Sittig. The Ersteins obtained their verdict on the 11th, and their judgment in their principal suit on the 17th day of June, 1884.

On the 14th day of June the circuit court of the United States made an order in said suit that Amelia Kothschild, the plaintiff in this case, “ do appear in said court and maintain her rights under the assignment to her in such manner and form as she may deem proper.” She did not' appear, and July 5th the statutory issue was tried in the Federal court, and judgment rendered against the garnishee defendant for the sum of $165.14, and further directed that when the money was collected it should be paid into court, subject to the further order of the court.

The suit in this case was commenced in May, 1884, before a justice of the peace in Detroit to recover the indebtedness assigned to her by Kothschild & Sittig. Before the justice the defendant set up in defense by plea in abatement the proceedings instituted against him in the garnishee suit, set forth down to the time of the commencement of this suit. The plaintiff filed a demurrer to the plea before the justice, which was sustained. The defendant then pleaded the general issue, and upon the trial the justice rendered judgment for the plaintiff. The case was then taken to the circuit court for the county of Wayne by appeal. The defendant then filed a plea puis darrein, setting up the entire procedings to judgment had against him in the United States court, as herein-before set forth, and the payment of the money into court as required in said judgment, as a bar to the plaintiff’s suit. A trial of the case was then had before a jury, who, under the instructions of court, returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and the case is before us on error. No additional facts to those above stated appeared upon the trial.

[544]*544This case presents very strikingly the rigor and hardship to which garnishees are not unfrequently subjected under the provisions of the present law. Here the garnishee is brought before courts in different jurisdictions because he owes an honest debt, and his creditor happens to be a debtor to those who are entire strangers to the garnishee, having no business relations whatever with him, and although he is able, ready and anxious to pay his indebtedness without any neglect or delinquency on his part, he is compelled to appear in two courts and litigate two suits, made liable for costs in each case, or may be to an extent beyond that of the original indebtedness, and then held liable to pay the latter in each suit. The judgment in one juris-dietion not being appealable, however erroneous it may be, .he has no means of escape therefrom.

It is not surprising that courts have felt it their duty to pronounce the .garnishee proceeding a harsh one, and restrict it to cases within the letter of the law. This does not properly characterize its effect in certain cases, under certain of its provisions. An actual fraud upon the rights of the garnishee is not unfrequently the result of some provisions of the statute, and it is to be hoped that this seriously •oppressive feature may at an early day receive the remedial -attention which alone can be given by the Legislature of our ■ State, that it may be so modified that a poor debtor, who is ready and willing to pay his debt when due, may be permitted so to do without being subjected to the vexation and ■expense of two or three lawsuits, and then be obliged to pay it a second time. 5

Counsel for plaintiff in this ease claims that the section of the statute under which the defendant insists the Federal -court obtained jurisdiction (How. Stat. §'8056) of the plaintiff is unconstitutional; that even though it be held ■constitutional it does not apply, if at all, to money indebtedness, but to goods and chattels only within the control ■or custody of plaintiff; that in no event can the plaintiff’s rights be determined in any other manner than by a ■court in which he may have his case tried by jury, and the [545]*545^-statute referred to secures to him no such right; that such ■right, as well as the manner of proceeding, is'left entirely in •the discretion of the court; that as matter of fact the defendant never notified the plaintiff to appear in the garnishee .proceedings in the Federal court, or would have permitted her to have defended in his name, nor does the order made by that court grant her the privilege of so doing. He also ■claims that the-affidavit in the garnishee proceedings was insufficient to give the court jurisdiction in the case. It is true, as was well said by Chief Justice Cooley in Bachelder v. Brown 47 Mich. 366, “the general rule is that judgments bind only parties and their privies; ‘but it is eqirally true that, those are held to be parties who have a right to control the proceedings, to make defense, to adduce proofs, and cross-examine the witnesses, and to appeal from the- decision •if any appeal lies.’ Peterson v. Lothrop 34 Penn. St. 223, 228. In this case, Calhoun v. Dunning 4 Dall. 120; Rogers v. Haines 3 Me. 362; Kinnersley v. Orpe Doug. 517, and other cases, all of them different in their facts, are cited 4o illustrate the general rule; and it is added that courts will look beyond the nominal party, and treat as the real party him whose interests are involved in the issue, and who conducts and controls the action or defense, and will hold him concluded by any judgment that may be rendered.” McNamee v. Moreland 26 Ia. 97; Stoddard v. Thompson 31 Ia. 80; Byrne v. Beeson 1 Doug. (Mich.) 184. But before the judgment can have this effect, the court in which the •suit or proceeding is had must have in some manner acquired jurisdiction in some legal manner constituting due process of law, and in which the right to divest him of his property ■may be passed upon by a jury, if he shall desire the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.W. 49, 57 Mich. 540, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothschild-v-burton-mich-1885.