Steen v. Norton

45 Wis. 412
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 45 Wis. 412 (Steen v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steen v. Norton, 45 Wis. 412 (Wis. 1878).

Opinion

RyaN, C. J.

The affidavit on which the garnishment of the respondent before the justice of the peace was founded, is fatally defective, in omitting to state that the money, effects [413]*413and credits of the principal debtor in the garnishee’s possession are not exempt. The statute makes the statement essential, and it is issuable. Winterfield v. Railway Co., 29 Wis., 589. The justice cannot be presumed to have gone, in his inquiry, beyond the facts stated in the affidavit, which stands for a complaint. Non constat that he might not give judgment against the garnishee for moneys or -credits of the principal debtor in his hands exempt as wages or otherwise. The affidavit was therefore wholly insufficient to authorize the constable to summon the garnishee, or to warrant the justice, on its return, to take jurisdiction of the proceeding.

The garnishee, however, appeared before the justice and submitted to examination, without objection. This would undoubtedly waive the objection, so far as it went to jurisdiction of his person. Want of jurisdiction of the person can always be waived; no submission or consent can confer jurisdiction of the subject matter. And so the question here is, whether the affidavit goes only to jurisdiction of the person, or goes to jurisdiction of the subject matter.

The statute makes the service of a summons on the garnishee the commencement of an action against him. But it is a most peculiar action, out of the ordinary course of judicial proceedings. It is an anomaly; a statutory invention sui generis, with no affinity to any action known to the common law. It does not proceed on liability of. the garnishee to the plaintiff, or on any privity between them. It is in effect an action brought by the plaintiff, in his own name and of his own will, in the right of the defendant in the principal suit; an action against the defendant’s debtor, a stranger to the principal cause of action. It intrudes between debtor and creditor, sets aside all considerations of forbearance or composition between them, and subjects the debtor to judgment, without action or consen| of his creditor. In effect, it makes one the creditor of another without privity of contract. And it may well operate unjustly. The garnishee, sued by his creditor’s creditor, may offset demands against his own creditor, but úot against the plaintiff who sues him. The gar [414]*414nisbee may be a creditor of the plaintiff who sues him, without right to defend himself on that ground.

The proceeding is so anomalous that it has troubled courts and writers to define it. Mr. Drake, in his work on attachments, sec. 452, says that “ garnishment is in the nature of a proceeding in rem, since its aim is to invest the plaintiff with the right and power to appropriate, to the satisfaction of his claim against the defendant, property of the defendant in the garnishee’s hands, or a debt due from the garnishee to the defendant.” And he quotes the language of Shaw, O. J., speaking of the process of garnishment by its name in Massachusetts: “The trustee process operates as a spccigs of compulsory statute, assignment, by which a creditor may obtain that by operation of law, which his debtor might voluntarily assign to him in payment of his debt.” Strong v. Smith, 1 Met., 476.

It is said above that the plaintiff in the principal srrit may resort to this extraordinary remedy at his own will; but'this is true only sub modo. It is not the policy of the statute to place this anomalous action, like ordinary actions, at the mere discretion of the plaintiff, or to give justices of the peace unqualified jurisdiction of it, as in ordinary actions, where every person can become a plaintiff, have process, and put the justice’s jurisdiction in motion, on demand. The plaintiff in garnishee proceedings, as in attachment as mesne process, re-plevin and the like, can put in motion the jurisdiction of the justice, only by complying with statutory prerequisites. And the justice takes jurisdiction of the proceeding, only upon the plaintiff’s compliance with the preliminaries which the statute makes the condition of jurisdiction. In order to entitle a plaintiff to have recourse to the process of garnishment, in order to confer on the justice jurisdiction to entertain it, he must first make the affidavit required by the statute. He may institute his suit against his own debtor, of his own mere will, without condition precedent, and the justice takes jurisdiction of it by the mere fact of its institution. So he may institute a suit against his debtor’s debtor, of his -own mere [415]*415will, without condition precedent, and the justice will take jurisdiction by the mere fact of its institution. But in that case the plaintiff can recover against the defendant in his own right only, not in the right of his debtor, not as a garnishee. Tie can take the right to sue his debtor’s debtor as garnishee, and the justice can take jurisdiction of the proceeding, only by force of the statutory affidavit. The affidavit is therefore the foundation, an essential condition, of the jurisdiction of the justice over the anomalous statutory proceeding; the statute making the extraordinary jurisdiction expressly dependent on the affidavit. Failure of the affidavit is therefore failure of jurisdiction over the subject matter. The justice’s jurisdiction of the proceeding is conditional, not absolute, and remains dormant until the affidavit supplies the condition. 'Without the affidavit, the proceeding could be no more than a personal action of the plaintiff, in his own right, against the garnishee.

The statute authorizes no amendment of the affidavit, once made; and wisely, in accordance with principle, because the affidavit is jurisdictional of the subject matter. An affidavit materially defective stands as no affidavit. All proceedings founded on a materially defective affidavit are coram non judice. And no appearance, no submission of the garnishee, can operate to waive the defect of jurisdiction. Schindler v. Smith, 18 La. Ann., 476; Phelps v. Boughton, 27 id., 592.

The proceeding is anomalous, not only in its scope, but in its practice. The statute declares that the service of the summons is the commencement of an action against the garnishee; yet the summons is not strictly judicial process; technically a warning only; is not issued, neither is the affidavit taken, by the justice. The affidavit is delivered by the plaintiff to the officer having the principal summons, who thereupon issues his process reciting the affidavit and summoning the garnishee to appear before the justice, and returns the affidavit and summons to him. The affidavit then, stands for the plaintiff’s complaint against the garnishee, and for the jurisdiction of the justice. But the statute declares that from the service of the summons the garnishee shall’ be liable to the plaintiff fox [416]*416the credits and effects of the principal defendant in bis possession.

It is quite certain that the officer takes no authority to summon the garnishee, without the statutory affidavit. And his summons without the affidavit cannot operate to fix the garnishee’s liability to the plaintiff. In that case, the garnishee may discharge his liability to his own creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Wis. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steen-v-norton-wis-1878.