Shelton v. Wolthausen

69 A. 1030, 80 Conn. 599
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 A. 1030 (Shelton v. Wolthausen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelton v. Wolthausen, 69 A. 1030, 80 Conn. 599 (Colo. 1908).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff is, and during the whole period covered by the events which have culminated in the *603 present controversy has been, the clerk of the Superior Court in Fairfield County. The fund here involved is the balance of a larger one which was by order of said court, passed in an action therein pending, paid into court and into the plaintiff’s hands as its depositary. That action was one in the nature of an interpleader brought by parties who were obligated to pay the amount so ordered to be paid into court and against' two defendants who made conflicting claims upon the plaintiffs therefor, and the court was asked, in the exercise of its equitable powers, to adjudicate the rights of the claimants, and to award the fund to the person or persons found entitled to it. The money thus deposited with this plaintiff passed into the custody of the law. It was the res which was the subject-matter of the action brought to determine its ownership and disposition. Such being its status, the court alone had authority over it, and that authority was one which could be properly exercised only through the medium of proceedings had in or relating to the pending cause. The jurisdiction which the court had over it could not be invaded by scire facias proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas, or, for that matter, any other court. Its disposition could not be controlled from without or through any other channels than those which the law provides as incidental to a pending action. Methods are provided whereby persons asserting claims, new or old, to funds thus in court awaiting judicial disposition, may present such claims to the consideration of the court, being admitted as parties for that purpose, if strangers to the cause. It became the privilegé of the Hat Company, already a party, if it conceived that it had acquired a new status in relation to the money remaining in court, or a new right to share in it, to interpose that claim. It was likewise the privilege of Wilson, as assignee of Settle, to apply to intervene in the action, and assert any claim which he thought that his situation justified. By no other course could either reach the fund and release it or any part of it from the judicial grasp which was upon it. This plaintiff, as the officer and de *604 positary of the court, could recognize no other authority than that which placed the money in his hands pending adjudication and judgment of distribution. Tuck v. Mann ing, 150 Mass. 211, 215, 22 N. E. 1001.

But that is not all. We have thus far considered the situation presented upon the assumption that no order of distribution of the balance now in contention had been made in the original action. Such, however, is not the fact. The balance, which the Hat Company and Wilson now claim, and which in the present action has been ordered paid to the Hat Company, was by the terms of the order passed in that action April 2d, 1903, directed to be paid to the Essex County Trust Company, one of the then parties claimant, and the present plaintiff was ordered to so pay it. Such was the situation when the present proceeding was begun, and such it is to-day. The. authority alone having jurisdiction to adjudicate as to the disposition of this res had adjudicated. The authority alone competent'to command this plaintiff as to bis conduct with it had commanded. The present resort to an independent action was therefore misconceived and irregular, as being in disregard of the plaintiff’s relation to the money in his hands, of the authority of the court over it in the pending action, and of the order of the court passed therein, or, if it be that the authority of the court in that action had been finally exercised and final judgment rendered, then of the terms of that final judgment, and the present judgment awarding the fund to the Hat Company must, for that reason, be set aside.

The Hat Company’s claim to the fund rests solely upon its institution of an action against Settle in which the plaintiff was named as garnishee, the service of the writ and complaint upon the latter, as required in garnishment proceedings, the rendition of final judgment in said action in favor of the Hat Company, the issuance of an execution thereon, and. a demand thereunder upon the plaintiff. In answer to this claim it is urged that the money in the plaintiff’s hands, being in the custody of the law, could *605 not be made the subject of foreign attachment. The Hat Company asserts the contrary proposition. The facts before us disclose a decree of the court directing that the money in controversy be paid to a third party. We have no occasion, therefore, to determine the broad general question, to which the arguments of counsel were for the most part addressed, as to whether or not a fund deposited in court, as this was, can under our statutes be made the subject of foreign attachment with any effect. It is of course plain from what has already been said that it cannot, with the usual consequence that judgment may be followed by seire facias proceedings to appropriate the fund. The field of inquiry in this direction is, however, not exhausted in this statement. But we have no occasion to traverse it. See Conover v. Ruckman, 33 N. J. Eq. 303; Trotter v. Lehigh Z. & I. Co., 41 id. 229, 3 Atl. 95; Dunlop v. Patterson Fire Ins. Co., 74 N. Y. 145; Wehle v. Conner, 83 id. 231; Tuck v. Manning, 150 Mass. 211, 22 N. E. 1001; Colby v. Coates, 6 Cush. (Mass.) 558; Allen v. Gerard, 21 R. I. 467, 44 Atl. 592; Winchell v. Allen, 1 Conn. 385; Stillman v. Isham, 11 id. 124. Neither have we occasion to decide the narrower question, sometimes distinguished from the former, as to the effect of garnishment proceedings upon a fund so placed in the hands of a depositary by order of court after the ownership of it has been adjudicated and an order paying it to the defendant in the attachment action has been passed. See Wilbur v. Flannery, 60 Vt. 581; Williams v. Jones, 38 Md. 555. The situation before us presents other controlling features.

A factorizing creditor can acquire no greater right to the effects of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee, or to any debt owing from the garnishee to the defendant or against the garnishee, than the defendant himself had at the time of the garnishment, unless it may be in cases of voluntary or fraudulent conveyances. He can only succeed in putting himself into the position with respect to the effects or debts attached that the defendant occupied. Fitch v. Waite, 5 Conn, 117, 122; Harris v. Phœnix Ins. *606 Co., 35 id. 310, 312; Parsons v. Root, 41 id. 161, 166. Settle was the defendant in the action of the Hat Company. It was, therefore, his debt due from the present plaintiff that was sought to be attached.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 1030, 80 Conn. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-wolthausen-conn-1908.