Saunders v. Moore

110 S.W.2d 1046, 110 S.W.2d 1047, 21 Tenn. App. 375, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 14, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 1046 (Saunders v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Moore, 110 S.W.2d 1046, 110 S.W.2d 1047, 21 Tenn. App. 375, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

In this case, A. P. Moore is insisting, through assignments of error and brief, that the trial judge erred in refusing to quash an execution issued by a justice of the peace of Dickson *377 county based on an execution from Humphreys county, against him and two others for. $382.68 and costs, and a levy o'f said Dickson county execution by garnishment of the First National Bank of Dickson, and in rendering judgment against said garnishee for $340.65, and against him (Moore) for costs.

The material facts out of which the controversy aróse, as disclosed by documentary evidence and the oral testimony of witnesses, are substantially as follows:

On January 3,1929, J. B. Bell, a justice of the peace of Humphreys county, rendered a judgment against H. W. Moore, A. P. Moore, and W. D. Moore, and in favor of A. J. Saunders, for the sum of $382.68, and costs. H. W. Moore is a brother and W. D. Moore is the father of plaintiff in error, A. P. Moore. The judgment was based on a note on which (as between the makers themselves) H. W. Moore was the principal and the other makers were sureties.’

Subsequent to the rendition of said judgment, J. B. Bell, justice of the peace, died, and his dockets passed into the custody of his successor in office, J. McReeves, who, on October 9, 1936, .issued an execution upon said judgment against, the three judgment debtors for $382.68 and costs, which execution was placed in the hands of R. P. Work, a justice of the peace for Dickson county, who, on the same day, issued another execution purporting to be issued upon an execution from Humphreys county pursuant to the provisions' of section 4801, Shan. Pode (Code 1932, section 8932).,

’One of the contentions of plaintiff in error is that the aforesaid execution issued in Dickson county is void because of an incorrect recital therein, to which we will make more specific reference later herein.

‘The execution issued by R. P. Work, justice of the peace, was by him placed in the hands, of E. W. Williams, a .deputy sheriff for Dickson county, who executed it (if it was a valid execution), or attempted to execute it (if it was void), by the service of a garnishment notice on the First National Bank of Dickson at 1 o’clock p. m. on October 9, 1936, summoning the garnishee to appear before R. P. Work, justice of the peace, to answer said garnishment at 2 o’clock p. m. on the same day. The sai.d deputy sheriff promptly handed said execution and garnishment notice to said R. P. Work, justice of the peace, but without any written “return” thereon showing, or purporting to show, that he had executed them or either of them.

Plaintiff in error A. P. Moore, being advised of the service of said garnishment notice, appeared, with his attorney, before R. P. Work, justice of the peace, and obtained a continuance of the proceeding until October 12, 1936. But the examination of the papers in the case by the attorney for plaintiff in error, at the office of Esq. Work, disclosed what said attorney conceived to be a fatal defect in the Dickson county execution, and this was called to the attention of *378 Esq. Work, wbo, of bis own motion, undertook to cure it by tbe issuance of another execution, which he placed in the hands of the aforementioned Deputy Sheriff E. W. Williams, with instructions to Williams “to go back to the Bank and re-serve it,” and Williams again went to the banking house of the First National Bank of Dickson and showed the latter execution to S. G-. Robertson, president of said bank, and told Mr. Robertson that “there was a mistake” and he “wanted to correct it,” and “wanted to re-serve it on him;” but no additional written garnishment notice was served on the bank, and none was prepared. The last-mentioned execution issued by Esq. Work on October 9, 1936, as aforesaid, was by him inadvertently dated September 9, 1936, and so remained until after the judgment of Esq. Work was rendered as hereinafter stated. Said second execution issued by Esq. Work was promptly handed back to him by the Deputy Sheriff Williams, but it then had no written “return” of the deputy sheriff thereon. However, when said second execution was thus handed back to Esq. Work by the deputy sheriff, he (Esq. Work) wrote across the face of the execution first issued by him as aforesaid, the word “void,” and also wrote on the margin thereof the words ■“withdrawn on account of error,” and “stuck it up in the pigeonhole away from the other.”

' All of the things done with respect to the two Dickson county executions and the garnishment notice to the bank, so far as we have heretofore stated them, occurred between the hours of 1 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon of October 9, 1936. But, as before stated, before the arrival of the hour at which the garnishee had been notified to answer, the justice of the peace had made an order continuing the entire proceedings until October 12, 1936, and on the latter date plaintiff in error, A. P. Moore, filed a written motion in the court of the justice of the peace (Work) “to quash the execution issued in this cause by R. P. Work, Justice of the Peace, and the garnishment proceedings based on the said execution” upon grounds stated in the motion as follows:

“The execution and garnishment proceeding based thereon are void because the execution does not show by writing anywhere on it that it has been levied on anything, nor that it has even been into the hands of an officer.
“The said execution is based on a certified execution from Humphreys County, Tennessee, and is void because it does not follow the Statutory requirements, in that, the Humphreys County execution shows that it was issued by one J. McReeves, J. P., and. the Dickson County execution shows that the Humphreys County execution was issued by one J. B. Bell, J. P.
“The said R. P. Work, Justice of the Peace, discovering that he had made a mistake in the issuance of the abovementioned execu *379 tion did, without authority of law, issue another execution on the same debt and before the garnishment proceedings under the former execution could be disposed of. Therefore the said Justice of the Peace had issued two executions against the same person and for the same debt on the same day.
“The second execution issued by the said Justice of the Peace is void for the reason it is dated September 9, 1936, while the certified execution on which it was issued is dated October 9, 1936. Therefore, according to the faces of the two instruments, the Dickson County execution was issued one month before the Humphreys County execution which is the authority for the Dickson County execution.
“Neither of the above mentioned executions shows any officer’s return on it, and therefore no valid levy has in fact been made.”

At the same time the garnishee, First National Bank of Dickson, filed a written motion “to quash the execution or executions issued by Esquire Work in this cause,” and “to quash the garnishment proceedings” upon grounds stated in its motion as follows:

“The execution issued by Esq. R. P. Work, J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 1046, 110 S.W.2d 1047, 21 Tenn. App. 375, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-moore-tennctapp-1937.