Sharar v. Pollia

191 F.2d 116, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3639
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1951
Docket4230_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 F.2d 116 (Sharar v. Pollia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharar v. Pollia, 191 F.2d 116, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3639 (10th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

This was an action by Andrew A. Pollia and six use plaintiffs, one of whom was appellant, J. A. Sharar, brought in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming against E. C. Nickel, a base contractor, and the Federal Public Housing Authority, to recover for work done and materials furnished under subcontracts with the base contractor. On a former appeal, see Nickel v. Pollia, 10 Cir., 179 F.2d 160, the judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded with directions to determine the issues in light of the opinion. On the second hearing, the trial court entered judgment August 2, 1950 in favor of Pollia against Nickel for $29,086.36. Nickel paid this amount into the Federal Court September 11, 1950. After the satisfaction of preferred claims against Pollia, there remained of the judgment $19,-701.07 for distribution among the use plaintiffs. Judgment was entered for Carleton A. Lathrop in the sum of $7,482.52, in satisfaction of an attorney’s lien claim, which the court found in his favor. Judgment was entered for Sharar for $9,701.26 and the remainder went to parties not concerned with this appeal. The appeal by Sharar challenges the correctness of the judgment so far as it affects him. .

The following facts arc necessary to a consideration of the question presented by the appeal. The federal action by Pollia and the six use plaintiffs against Nickel was filed April 3, 1947. On May 29, 1947 Sharar sued Pollia in the district court of Albany County, Wyoming, seeking a money judgment under his subcontracts with him. A writ of garnishment was served on E. C. Nickel Construction Company, 1 the defendant in this action, requiring the garnishee to answer as to any money or assets in its hands belonging to Pollia by June 18, 1947. On June 3, 1947, the Nickel Construction Company filed an answer, setting out the action pending against it by Pollia in the federal court and further answered that “We are not in a position to make any statements as to monies owing to Andrew A. Pollia by ourselves until the determination of the pending suit in the federal court”. On June 17, 1947 a more formal answer was filed by the garnishee setting forth in substance the same facts and stating further, “And until the controversy existing in the action now pending in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming is finally determined and a judgment entered therefor, your answering garnishee is unable to determine the amount due the plaintiff (Sharar) herein; that when a determination is made in the suit now pending in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming this answering garnishee will deliver said money into court (United States Court) and have receipts therefor and be discharged from liability to any of the parties for same”.

On March 4, 1948 judgment was entered in the state court action against Pollia in favor of Sharar for $9,748.00, with interest *118 at seven- per cent per annum from November 18,1946, and costs. As to the garnishee, Nickel Construction Company, the judgment provided: “It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that Plaintiff has had a lien upon and this court has had constructive custody of all monies, credits, indebtedness and property of every description whatsoever belonging to Defendant (Pollia) to the extent of Plaintiff’s claims, costs and interest, in the hands of the Garnishee, E„ C. Nickel Construction Company, its successors and assigns, since the service upon said garnishee of the writ of attachment and order and notice of garnishment of May 29, 1947 and that said Garnishee, its successors or assigns shall pay and deliver unto this court by depositing the same with the clerk thereof all such monies, credits, indebtedness and property of any kind whatsoever belonging to defendant which' may be in its hands, to the extent of Plaintiff’s judgment for $9,748.00, costs and interest thereon as soon as possible after the amount of such property of the Defendant in the hands of said Garnishee, its successors or assigns is or can be determined for the use of Plaintiff and the payment of his judgment hereby entered.”

No further steps were taken by Sharar in either the state action or this action to collect his state judgment, until September 22, 1950, when he filed an application for permission to intervene in the .federal action. This move was prompted by an order in' this case, setting a hearing for September 22, 1950, for considering the manner of the distribution of the proceeds of the judgment. The reason for the further consideration of the distribution of the judgment was made necessary by notice of certain other claims, which had preference in payment out of the judgment. In his petition of intervention, Sharar alleged that he was listed' ás a use plaintiff without his knowledge. He set out the state action, the garnishment proceedings, his judgment in the state court, asserted a first and prior lien on the judgment in the federal' court by reason of his garnishment, asked for the full amount of the state judgment and that he be relieved from any and all provisions of the judgment of the federal court.

In short, Sharar’s position is that the garnishment proceeding was an action in rem; that.by virtue thereof he acquired a valid first lien on any sums due Pollia from Nickel to the extent of his judgment in the state court; that the federal court had no right to interfere with the “res” in custody of the state court and that by its final judgment it failed to give full faith and credit to the state court judgment.

The authorities are not in accord as to the rights acquired under a garnishment. A distinction is made by some courts between the taking of tangible property and debts. Some courts hold that the right acquired is a lien, others that it creates a quasi lien, an equitable lien, and still others hold that it gives rise only to a contingent personal liability. A detailed discussion of the subject is found in 38 C.J.S., Garnishment, § 181. In view of the conclusions we have reached, it is not necessary to resolve this conflict nor is it important to the decision whether Sharar authorized the use of his name as a use plaintiff in the federal action or knew that he was so joined.

Had Pollia merely sought a personal judgment against Nickel, the situation would have been entirely different. Then the entry of the judgment would have exhausted the court’s jurisdiction. The federal court then would have had no concern over the judgment and it would have been, subject to garnishment proceedings in another action. Whether, if such proceedings were filed prior to the entry of the judgment, the subsequently entered judgment would be subject thereto need not be decided. In any event, the judgment when finally entered would be subject to garnishment proceedings, because then there would be no interference with the subject matter of the suit. Such facts would have brought the federal action within the decision of the Supreme Court in Huron Holding Corporation v. Lincoln Mine Operating Co.,. 312 U.S. 183, 61 S.Ct. 513, 85 L.Ed. 725, where the court held that a money judgment in a federal court was subject to garnishment in a state court action. But such is not the case here.

The subject matter of a federal action and of the garnishment phase of the. *119

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191 F.2d 116, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharar-v-pollia-ca10-1951.