Stahl v. Webster

11 Ill. 511
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 11 Ill. 511 (Stahl v. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stahl v. Webster, 11 Ill. 511 (Ill. 1850).

Opinion

Opinion by Mr. Justice Trumbull :

This is a controversy between the attaching and judgment creditors of Webster, as to the distribution'of the amount due from the garnishee, in the attachment suits. F. and N. Stahl and Straehan and Scott, sued out attachments against Webster, returnable to the March term, 1850, of the Jo Daviess Circuit Court; and in both cases the same person was summoned as garnishee. At the return term, judgments were entered against the defendant in the attachment suits, and also against the garnishee, for the amount he acknowledged himself indebted to the defendant. An order was then entered, directing the clerk to make an estimate of the amount which each attaching creditor was entitled to, out of the credits attached in the hands of the garnishee. Subsequently, but during the same term of the Court, a judgment was entered against said Webster, on a warrant of attorney to confess judgment, in favor of 'William and James Moir, and thereupon a motion was made in behalf of the Moirs, for an apportionment between them and the attaching creditors, of the sum due from the garnishee, in proportion to the amount of their respective judgments ; which motion was allowed, and the previous order of the Court directing the sum due from the garnishee to be distributed between the attaching creditors, rescinded. F. and N. Stahl now bring the case here, and assign for error, the rescinding the first order of distribution, and allowing the plaintiffs in the judgment by confession to share in the proceeds to be collected from the garnishee.

It is a familiar doctrine, that a Court has control over its records, to alter or amend them, during the term at which they are entered. If, therefore, the last order of distribution was proper, the Court committed no error in rescinding the first.

The plaintiffs in error insist, that the twenty-sixth section of the attachment act, R. S., 69, providing, under certain circumstances, for an equitable division of the proceeds of the property attached, among various creditors of the defendant, does not apply to a case where the attachments are served on a garnishee, hut only to cases where they are levied upon visible, tangible property. The language of the act is, that, “in all cases where more than one attachment shall he issued against the same person or persons, and returnable to the same term of the Court to which they are returnable, or when a judgment in a civil action shall also be rendered at the same term against the' defendant who is the same person and defendant in the attachment or attachments, the Court shall direct the clerk to make an estimate of the Several amounts each attaching or judgment creditor will be entitled to out of the property of the defendant attached, either in the hands of any garnishee or otherwise, after the sale and receipt of the proceeds thereof by the sheriff, calculating the amount in proportion to the amount of their several judgments, with costs, as the same will respectively bear to the amount of the sum received; so that each attaching and judgment creditor will receive his just part thereof, in the proportion to his respective demand.” The language of this section expressly authorizes the creditors therein specified to share pro rata in the proceeds of the property attached, whether in the hands of a garnishee or otherwise. Why confine this equitable distribution to the proceeds of the attached property, which are moveable and tangible P Is there any reason why a party obtaining a judgment in a civil action, should be permitted to divide with the attaching creditor the money collected by virtue of his attachment upon visible property, and not permitted to share with him the money collected by virtue of the same attachment, from a garnishee ? Before drawing such a distinction, the Court should be clearly satisfied that the Legislature intended to make it. The word “property” embraces money, debts and choses in action of every kind, as well as articles that can be seen and handled. A debt due from another, is as much property, and as effectually attached, when the person owing it has been summoned as a garnishee, as is any visible species of property upon which the attachment may have been levied.

The law is the same as to what property shall be apportioned between attaching creditors, as it is as between them and a judgment creditor in a civil action, and no complaint is made in this case, that the first order of distribution between the attaching creditors was not proper. The words “after the sale and receipt of the proceeds thereof by the sheriff,” have reference to the time when the clerk is to make the estimate. He is not required, and cannot properly do this, till the property attached has been turned into money; for till then, he cannot know how much will be collected. The Court directs the clerk how to make the estimate, and the making of it is a mere ministerial act, to be performed afterwards. If the words under consideration should be held to limit the distribution to the proceeds of such property as had been attached and sold, then when an attachment was levied upon the money of the defendant, no apportionment could take place, because it would not be liable to be sold. Such could not have been the intention of the Legislature. Looking at the object had in view, in the enactment of the twenty-sixth section, and taking all its provisions together, it is clear that the avails of the property attached, when turned into money, whether they are the proceeds arising from a sale of property or from the collection of a debt due from a garnishee, are all liable to be apportioned among the attaching and judgment creditors, which the section specifies.

It is, however, insisted that this construction is impracticable j that the judgment of the attaching creditor may be for a less amount than the garnishee owes; that such creditor may, at any time, enter his judgment satisfied, or the defendant may pay the judgment 5 in which event, the garnishee will be released, and the Court will have no means of collecting the debt due from him and applying it towards the satisfaction of the judgment in the civil suit, inasmuch as no execution can issue upon that judgment against the garnishee. All these difficulties are just as formidable, if the construction contended for by plaintiffs’ counsel be given to the statute.

In this very case, F. and N. Stahl, the attaching creditors, only obtained judgment against Webster for $ 1,423 06, and yet a judgment is entered in their favor against the garnishee for $ 1,836 83. What authority, it may be asked, had the Court to enter a judgment against the garnishee, in favor of F. and N. Stahl for a greater amount than they had recovered against the defendant in the attachment ? It wa's done, no doubt, so as to be able to collect from the garnishee the whole amount he was owing, that it might be apportioned between the different attaching creditors. It so happened, in this particular case, that both attachments were served upon the same garnishee.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ill. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stahl-v-webster-ill-1850.