Wile v. Cohn

63 F. 759, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2998
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 17, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 F. 759 (Wile v. Cohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wile v. Cohn, 63 F. 759, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2998 (circtsdia 1894).

Opinion

WOOLSON, District Judge.

This is a contest between plaintiffs, attaching creditors, and the Farmers’ State Bank of Charter Oak, Iowa, as garnishee defendant. The parties having filed stipulation, waiving jury, the cause was tried to the court.'

The following facts are by me found as proved herein: Plaintiffs are citizens and residents of the state of New York, and were at the date hereinafter named engaged as a copartnership in the city of Buffalo, N. Y., in the business of dealers in clothing, etc. Defendant W. Cohn was in December, 1893, a citizen and resident of the state of Iowa, and engaged at the town of'Charter Oak, Iowa, in the business of clothing .merchant. The garnishee defendant bank is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Iowa, and doing business at the said town of Charter Oak, Iowa. Upon December 12,1892, said Cohn was indebted to said bank in the sum of $950. The bank cashier on that day demanded of Cohn security for this indebtedness, and thereupon Cohn executed a chattel mortgage upon all his “stock of goods and merchandise, store furniture, and fixtures, of whatever kind,” then owned by him, and kept in the building which he was occupying as his clothing store. The mortgagee is named therein as “D. O. Johnson, cashier, of Charter Oak, Iowa;” and the mortgage is conditioned upon the payment “to the said D. O. Johnson, cashier, his heirs, assigns,” etc., of Cohn’s two promissory notes, dated December 12, 1892, and described as follows, to wit: One for $950, payable on demand, 1892; one for $4,000, payable on demand, 1892,—with interest, etc. The mortgage provided for public sale at auction after five days’ notice. The évidenee shows that this $950 note was given for the indebtedness due from Cohn to the bank. It named as its payee “D. O. Johnson, cashier.” The $4,000 note named as payee Harry Cohen. This last named note was surrendered within a few days after its exe[761]*761cutí on, and was canceled, leaving the mortgage standing as security for only the said indebtedness to the hank (§950). This mortgage w as immediately filed for record, and, on the day following (December 13, 1892), Cohn delivered to said Johnson the key to the store in which was the mortgaged property, and also delivered to Johnson a written agreement or consent that said Johnson should sell the mortgaged property at private sale. On same day, Johnson sold, at private sale, sufficient of said mortgaged property to realize, at 75 cents on the dollar of cost: price, Die sum of $1,050, thus paying the bank’s debt, and leaving, besides, $100, belonging to said Cohn. In December, 1892, and before the commencement of the case at bar, Gilmore & Buhl, Block Bros., and certain other creditors of said Cohn (including the First National Bunk of Omaha) severally instituted their actions against said Cohn in the district court, of Crawford county, Iowa, aided by attachment, in each of which actions said D. O. Johnson was served with notice of garnishment; -some of said garnishment notices cited him to appear before said Crawford “district court, commencing the 15th day of February, 1893,” while others cited Mm to appear before said court “on the first day thereof, which will commence on February 15,1893.” In the action by said Omaha Bank the notice summoned him to appear on February 20, 3893. On the 1st day of February, 1893, term of said Crawford district court, “to wit, February 20, 3,893,” said Johnson appeared in each of said actions, and filed Ms answer as garnishee, admitting the “possession of a remnant of a stock of goods and fixtures, situated in Charter Oak, Iowa, in the storeroom where the defendant formerly conducted business,” and which answer contained the following language:

“Tlie goods were mortgaged to me by tbe defendant, to secure a debt due tbe Farmers’ State Bank of Obarter. Oak, Iowa, of winch I am cashier. By the consent of the mortgagor, I sold goods enough out of the stock to pay the debt due the bank. It was in amount $950. The balance of the goods Í now hold, subject to the order of the court.”

In each of these actions, except that brought by said hank (in which Cohn appeared by attorney), said Cohn was personally served with notice of the pendency of said action, and also with notice of the pendency of garnishment proceedings, as required by the statutes of Iowa; and, for failure to appear, his default was entered therein, and judgment duly rendered against him for the several claims sued on; and the court found that property of Cohn’s, “to wit:, a stock of clothing and gents’ furnishing goods, situated in Charter Oak, Iowa,” was in the hands of the garnishee, and adjudged that said stock he condemned and ordered sold on special execution, etc. Subsequently, these goods were sold, on special execution, issued under these judgments, by the sheriff of Crawford county, for an amount not sufficient to pay the aggregate of said judgments above described; and the proceeds were paid into said Crawford county court, for further order of court thereon. The Omaha hank judgment, condemning and ordering sale of said goods, was rendered May 2, 1893. In each of said other actions, judgment was rendered February 24, 1893.

[762]*762The action of Wile et al. (case at bar) against said Cohn was commenced in this court December 19,1892, by filing petition, aided by attachment; and on the next day (December 20th), and subsequent to the said levies in the state court, said attachment was levied by the service of the writ of attachment and notice of garnishment upon the Farmers’ State Bank of Charter Oak, Iowa, the notice of garnishment being served on said bank by reading and delivering copy to D. O. Johnson, cashier of said bank. Said notice is in the form generally used in Iowa in like proceedings in the state courts, and is signed by thé marshal of this court. Due notice of said garnishment having been given to said Cohn, this cause has now come on for trial upon the answer of said Farmers’ State Bank, denying indebtedness to said Cohn and of possession or control of any of his property, and the pleading by plaintiffs filed, controverting said answer of said bank.

The first point to be considered is the plea of the garnishee bank, as set up in its answer, that no legal garnishment has been made herein, for the reason that the garnishment notice is signed by the marshal of this court, and was not issued under the teste of the chief justice of the supreme court of the United States, and does not have the seal of this court attached thereto; in other words, that said garnishment notice is a “process” of this court, and therefore must conform to the requirements of section 911 of the Revised Statutes, relating to process; and, because it does not so conform, it is void, and this court has no jurisdiction over said bank as gar•nishee herein. The reasoning by which the garnishee seeks to enforce this point is based on the assertion that “a garnishment is, in effect, a suit by the defendant, in the plaintiff’s name, against the garnishee;” and Daniels v. Clark, 38 Iowa, 559, is cited as sustaining this position. But a reading of that case disproves the claim. Daniels & Co, had recovered judgment against one Riniger, and garnished Clark, as an alleged creditor of Riniger. Upon the trial the court found the garnishee indebted to Riniger, and rendered judgment accordingly. The case having been appealed to the circuit court, petitions of intervention were filed by persons claiming that the indebtedness from Clark to Riniger had been assigned to them before Clark was garnished; and the main contest was as to the right of the circuit court thus to permit the filings of these intervening petitions.

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Bluebook (online)
63 F. 759, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wile-v-cohn-circtsdia-1894.