Wilmer ex rel. Clark v. McCardell

3 Balt. C. Rep. 19
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedApril 1, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 19 (Wilmer ex rel. Clark v. McCardell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmer ex rel. Clark v. McCardell, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 19 (Md. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

SAMS, J.—

This is an appeal tried before the court without a jury, aud is an appeal in an attachment case, the attachment haying been issued on a judgment of a justice. The same magistrate having rendered the judgment and afterwards issued the attachment. The attachment is also one of a series of such attachments obtained by the plaintiff in this case on a number of judgments rendered in his favor by different magistrates in Baltimore City, against various defendants. Some of these judgments, upon which attachments were issued, were of such venerable age, that their very existence had been forgotten by all parties interested except the industrious plaintiff. In the case under consideration, with the writ .and attachment thereto, were certain interrogatories, which were served at the same time the writ was served by the constable, hut by the notice attached to them, were required to he answered about a week before the return day of the writ.

Because of the number of these cases it has been thought worth while to state the facts in this ease somewhat fully, and while the facts in this case differ in some respects from those in the other cases tried on appeal in this court, in which the same plaintiff appears, still there is a decided resemblance, as the evidence shows, between this case and the other attachment suits brought by this extremely active and pertinacious plaintiff. The general scheme of the plaintiff is the same in all of the attachments which he has had issued from time to time.

Besides, the questions raised in this case, except as to one point of law, are the same as those raised in all the other cases.

On August 17th, 1908, a judgment was obtained by Wilmer, the legal plaintiff, against Paca, the judgment debtor for $80.58 with interest, until paid and costs. On the 23rd day of September, 1908, an attachment was issued by Randolph R. Warfield, a magistrate, upon said judgment and laid in the hands of Walter B. McCardell, the garnishee, on the 24th day of September, 1908, and at the time of the service of the writ certain written interrogatories, attached to the writ, were also served by the constable, Emanuel Lip-per, who served both the writ and the interrogatories. The writ was made returnable on the 22nd day of October, 1908. A notice was attached to the written interrogatories as follows :

“To tlie Garnishee:
“Take Notice. That you are hereby required to answer in writing- and under oath each one of the aforegoing interrogatories within twenty days from the service thereof on you.
“E. M. WILMER, Plaintiff.”

It will be observed that according to that notice the interrogatories, which were attached to the writ, were to be answered within twenty days after service which was about seven days before .the writ was returnable. The answers to the interrogatories were in writing and under oath and filed with the magistrate on the 9th day of October, 1908. The interrogatories contained the usual questions. The answers, in effect, stated that the judgment debtor was an employee of the garnishee at, a weekly salary of $18 payable each' Saturday,- that the garnishee owed nothing to the judgment debtor, but in fact that the judgment debtor owed the garnishee about $250. The ease was then tried before the justice and judgment of condemnation was given for $84.35 and $6.56 costs and interest until paid. The garnishee appealed to this court.

In the trial on appeal McCardell, the garnishee, was called by the plaintiff as a witness, and testified that he was a builder, an attachment was laid in his hands, on the day named in the writ, upon a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Wilmer, against the defendant, Paca, and attached to the writ were certain interrogatories to be answered within twenty days from the day of service, that the interrogatories were answered in writing and under oath in time, in fact, about a week before the twenty days expired under the notice, namely on the 9th day of October, 1908, the twenty days expiring on the 14th day of October, 1908, that he never gave Paca a promissory note. [21]*21lmd paid liim up, owed him weekly, paid him weekly. Paea was a boss carpenter in his employ, at $3 a day, $18 a week. The same witness, after the close of the plaintiff’s case, was called as witness in Ills own behalf and in addition to a repetition of the evidence given as witness for the plaintiff, testified that instead of his owing the judgment debtor anything, Pa.ca owed him about $250, and that the witness had deducted about $7 from Paca’s wages to repay himself, and that at the trial below had claimed an exemption, as garnishee from attachment on the ground that Paca was an employee of his, and that he paid Paca only wages. That such exemption was claimed at the trial below was substantiated by the witness, Bouchet, who was the attorney for the garnishee, and represented him at the trial before the justice.

The magistrate, who heard the case below, was called as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff and produced his docket and testified that the garnishee admitted assets of $90, that interrogatories and answers were filed and that judgment was given for $84.35, costs and interest, and upon cross-examination testified that assets were confessed by garnishee, that upon being shown the writ admitted that there were certain erasures in it, that figures and words had been scratched out but by whom he did not know, that certain entries on the back of the writ and in his docket had been made by the plaintiff, Wilmer, that the witness had permitted this to be done but that he had signed the writ and the docket, that the writ and the interrogatories were sent out the same da,y being attached the one to the other, that the dates were filled in when the writ was issued ; that the plaintiff, Wilmer, filled in the blanks, the witness signing and issuing and that the docket entries show confession of assets.

Wilmer, the jfiaintiff. testified that he was present at the day of the trial below, that the garnishee appeared and admitted that Baca, the judgment debtor, was in his employ, that he paid him a weekly salary and that the garnishee had assets between the times the attachment was laid and the day of trial, that he claimed judgment for the amount for which judgment was entered, and on cross-examination admitted that McOardell, garnishee, testified that Paca was an employee and was paid a weekly salary, that he filled out the blanks in the writ down to the signature of the justice, that part of the entries in the docket of the justice were in the handwriting of the witness, that in making those entries he acted as “the scribe” of the justice, that once the writ was returned not served, then “I changed the dates” and (he writ was re-issued, that no exemption claimed.

Under the facts it is perfectly clear that the judgment of the magistrate should be reversed, because under Section 33, Article 9 of the Code, “No attachments of the wages or hire of any laborer or employee in the hands of the employers, whether private individuals or bodies corporate, shall effect any salary or wages of the debtor which are not actually due at the date of the attachment, and the sum of $100 of such wages or hire due to any laborer or employee by any employer or corporation shall always be exempt from attachment by any process whatever.” In this case that section absolutely controls, and it is extremely difficult to understand how the magistrate could have rendered a judgment in favor of the attaching creditor.

That as Section 33 of Article 9 is conclusive of this particular case under the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmer-ex-rel-clark-v-mccardell-mdcityctbalt-1909.