State Ex Rel. Busby v. Cowan

107 S.W.2d 805, 232 Mo. App. 391, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 94
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 805 (State Ex Rel. Busby v. Cowan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Busby v. Cowan, 107 S.W.2d 805, 232 Mo. App. 391, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 94 (Mo. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition. Upon the filing of the petition for the writ we issued our preliminary rule. Respondent filed a return, raising issues of law, whereupon, relator *392 filed his motion for judgment on the pleadings. Under the circumstances, the facts stated in the petition for the writ will be taken as true. [State ex rel. v. Caulfield, 234 Mo. 331.]

These facts show that respondent is one of the Judges of The Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri; that on October 20, 1936, one Madalyn Busby filed a suit in equity against the relator in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, in the nature of a creditor’s bill, seeking to collect an alimony judgment.

The petition in equity alleged that on October 18, 1934, plaintiff recovered a judgment against the relator in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, for alimony, payable $10 per week, in advance, and for an attorney’s fee of $50; that .there-were accumulations upon the judgment in the sum of $1100; that plaintiff had éxhausted all of .her legal remedies for the collection of the judgment; that the relator was1 a regular employee in the Fire Department of Kansás City, a ■municipal corporation, receiving a salary of $135 per month; that said salary was not subject to garnishment, execution or any legal process; that relator was possessed of no property other than his salary out of which the judgment could be satisfied'; that defendant had steadfastly refused to pay .the installments 'due upon the judgment ; that he had defied the. officers of the court in the collection of the judgment and had threatened to continue to collect and- 'conceal his wages for the purpose of avoiding its payment. The petition prayed that a receiver be appointed to receive the salary of the defendant and to pay it over to the plaintiff to apply upon the judgment and that relator be restrained and enjoined from indorsing, transferring, assigning, or in any manner converting into cash, any of the salary checks received by him from the city,"except for the purpose-of transferring the.same to the receiver.

The facts further show that the cause came on for hearing before respondent, judge, and that he appointed a temporary receiver, who will, unless prevented, retain and take charge of relator ’s’salary. The prayér of the petition for the writ asks that respondent be' prohibited from taking charge and control of relator’s salary or from placing the same in the custody or control of the receiver. ■ ;

It was admitted that, under the provisions of section 1398, Revised Statutes 1929, relator’s employer, being a municipal corporation, is not subject to garnishment. In fact, plaintiff based her cause of action in equity upon the ground that she had no remedy on account of said statute. Relator, by reason of the same statute, claims that plaintiff cannot maintain a creditor’s bill, to reach his salary, for the reason that to permit such' would be doing indirectly what the Jaw forbids to be done directly.

We think relator’s contention must be sustained. In Geist v. City of St. Louis, 156 Mo. 643, 650, the Supreme Court quoted, approvingly, the following from Addyston Pipe Co. v. Chicago, 170 Ill. l. c. *393 584: “ ‘If, as we have held, a municipal corporation is not liable to the process of garnishment, upon what ground can a creditor’s bill be maintained against a municipal corporation ? If -it is contrary to public policy to permit the one,-upon the same ground and for like reasons must not the other be denied? The process of garnishment and a creditor’s bill are, in effect, instituted for the same purpose. They are, as a general rule, instituted to reach money in the hands of a third party due and owing from a judgment debtor to a judgment creditor. A reference to the statute under which the two proceedings are instituted will show their similarity.’”

In the Geist case it was held that where a judgment has. been obtained against a resident of the 'State who is employed by a .municipal corporation and execution is issued and returned nulla bona, neither by a suit in equity against said employee and the city, nor by statutory garnishment, can the city be compelled to pay such judgment creditor the salary due such employee.

However, respondent says that her suit in equity is not against the city but against the employee, only; that the statute prohibiting garnishment proceedings against the city is based, not upon any theory that the employee should be protected from annoyance and humiliation, but the statute is for the purpose of protecting the city, itself, and, in this connection respondent cites Hawthorn v. City of St. Louis, 11 Mo. 59. That case was decided before the enactment of the statute in question and the Supreme Court, held that even then a municipal corporation could not be summoned as .garnishee for the reason that, on the ground of public policy, the officers of a city should not be called upon to devote their 'time to controversies between debtors and creditors, in which the municipality has no. interest. . .

The majority of the courts of -this country have held, even in'the absence of a statute, that a-municipal corporation cannot be subjected to garnishment proceedings. Some of them base their holding- upon the theory stated in the case of Hawthorn v. City of St. Louis* supra, and others upon that theory and upon the further .ground that it is to the interest of the public that municipalities have the largest possible field from which to select competent, reliable and skillful men to perform services, and that if persons are to be compelled to transfer their claim for compensation to creditors then-, those who are in debt are not likely to apply for such employment and that if they actually take employment they may be caused to, or voluntarily, give up their positions if their salaries were garnished. [See Morgan v. Rust (Ga.), 28 S. E. 419; McGrew v. McGrew, 38 Fed. (2d) 541; Gerald v. Walker (Ala.). 78 So. 856; Joffe v. McAdorv (Tenn.), 79 So. 391; Goodwin State Bank v. Wisc., 263 Ill. App. 291.].

We are not called upon to speculate as to the reason that actuated the Legislature in enacting the statute. It is sufficient for us to know that such a statute is in existence. In such circumstances, to conn *394 tenanee a proceeding of this kind would result in permitting the creditor to accomplish indirectly what she is forbidden to do directly. It is "settled law that a creditor’s bill is considered in the same category as a garnishment proceeding when filed for the same purpose.” [Goodwin State Bank v. Wisc., supra, l. c. 295; Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. City of Chicago, 170 Ill. 580.] We have examined Watterbury v. Commbs, 10 Mont. 515; Clarke v. Bert (Kan.), 42 Pac. 733, and Riggin v. Hilliard, 54 Ark. 451, cited by the respondent and find them not in harmony with Geist v. City of St. Louis, supra.

There is another reason why the suit in equity cannot be maintained. Unearned salary canncft be reached by a creditor’s bill. [Browning v. Bettis (N. Y.), 8 Page 568; Valentine v. Williams, 159 N. Y. Supp. 815; Tompers v. Tompers, 159 N. Y. Supp. 817; McGrew v. McGrew, supra; 15 C. J., pp. 1401, 1403; Raithel v. Hamilton-Schmidt Surgical Co., 48 S. W. (2d) 79; Hearne v. Keath, 63 Mo. 84.].

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 805, 232 Mo. App. 391, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-busby-v-cowan-moctapp-1937.