Wood Garage v. Jasper

67 P.2d 1000, 41 N.M. 289
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1937
DocketNo. 4184.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 P.2d 1000 (Wood Garage v. Jasper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood Garage v. Jasper, 67 P.2d 1000, 41 N.M. 289 (N.M. 1937).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Justice.

The Wood Garage sued the husband of appellant in the justice of the peace court on a promissory note executed August 10, 1929, by defendant W. H. Jasper and his father H. D. Jasper, and garnisheed a bank which held $160 on deposit in the name of the defendant, as appears by the answer of the garnishee. No defense was made to the action- on the note. The appellant, Frankie Jasper, intervened and claimed that the money on deposit was her property and was not the money or property of the defendant. The justice of the peace rendered judgment for plaintiff on the note and adjudged that the garnishment be quashed.

The transcript on appeal to the district court shows a subject-matter within the jurisdiction of the justice court, and appellant, by its appeal, vouched for the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace, and the district court. There is no claim that the jurisdiction of the justice court had ever been divested prior to the appeal.

The only contested matter in the district court involved the ownership of the money in the hands of the garnishee. It was a jury trial. The Jaspers offered testimony that 'the money belonged to appellant, intervener, and explained that it was rent money from an oil lease on land owned by the appellant, and supported such ownership by a deed from her husband to her, executed June 27, 1928, and recorded July 7, 1928, which was received in evidence without objection. Plaintiff then, for the first time, so far as appears from the record, sought to assail by cross-examination and tender of proof the bona fides of the deed. The na-. ture of the evidence tendered by appellee for the purpose of destroying the weight of the deed to intervener in support of her. claim of ownership of the fund tendered, if believed, to support the inference that the conveyance had been made and accepted for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the grantor existing at the date of the conveyance; but since the deed was executed and recorded more than a year prior to incurring of indebtedness to plaintiff and about five years before this suit was commenced, it does not appear that any evidence was offered which would discharge the heavy burden upon one who seeks to set •aside a conveyance -as being fraudulent as against subsequent creditors, since the tendered evidence may not show actual fraud, and is silent as to reliance of plaintiff upon his belief of defendant’s ownership of the land at the time credit was extended, and the tendered evidence smacks of the nature of a stale claim viewed from the standpoint of laches or limitations. However, this is unimportant except as suggestive upon another trial.

Intervener objected to the evidence tendered by appellee on the ground that plaintiff could not assail her title in this proceeding* because the court did not have power under the circumstances to adjudicate the title and set the deed aside, because such relief was not within the issues. Plaintiff conceded that the deed could not be set aside in this action, but contended that since intervener’s claim of ownership of the fund was necessarily based upon her ownership of the land, her cause would fail if the court found that she did not own it. Intervener, with unfortunate persistence, objected to the court’s considering the evidence offered by plaintiff to defeat her claim of ownership of the land. The court agreed with intervener and quoted section 79-206, N.M.Stats. 1929 Comp., as follows: "Title to lands in qicestion—Procedure. If it appear on the trial of any cause from the evidence, that the title to lands is in question, the justice shall immediately make an entry thereof on his docket and cease all further proceedings.”

The district court decided that on an appeal from a justice court it was bound by the same limitations and procedure applicable to such inferior courts. As to this we find it unnecessary to decide. However, the trial court did not follow through with this idea consistently. If, as he decided, he was sitting for a trial of the cause with no more power than the justice of the peace would have had if confronted with the same situation and was subject to the control of the statute quoted and was correct in his view that the justice court would have been ousted of jurisdiction in a like situation, then it was the district court’s duty to make an entry on his docket “and cease all further proceedings.” The trial judge did not do this, but instead rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the garnishee, which amounted to an adjudication that the money belonged to the defendant and not to the intervener, resting his decision solely on the fact that the money was deposited in the bank in defendant’s account therein. Manifestly, if it appeared from the evidence “that the title to lands is in question,” even though incidentally, this was so because the issue of the ownership of the money could not be decided without deciding who owned the land. The result of the ruling was to deprive the intervener of her day in court to assert her ownership of the fund. The trial court adopted the view that the intervention was a proceeding separate and distinct from the garnishment, although intervener had filed a petition in intervention and had also filed a “denial of the answer of garnishee,” which stated that officers of the garnishee bank knew-at the time they filed its answer that the sum of $160 deposited in said bank, and referred to in paragraph 1 of the answer of said garnishee, was the sole, separate, and individual property of the intervener, and that the defendant W. H.' Jasper at no time since that deposit was made had any right, title, or interest in or to said deposit or credit in said bank. We cannot regard the intervention as a distinct and separate proceeding unrelated to the garnishment proceeding, but, even if it were, the district court was wrong in saying that intervener had interjected a dispute as to the title to real estate or that it was drawn in question by her, merely because she offered in evidence a deed to the land as evidence of her ownership of the money in question. If any one interjected a dispute as to title to land it was appellee.

The just trial judge realized the misfortune thus visited upon the intervener and announced that he would delay rendering judgment for a time sufficient for her to go into the district court, in an original proceeding to assert her right to the money,'which court would not be trammeled in deciding the issue even though the title to lands might be drawn in question.

If it was the district court’s duty to cease all further proceedings because of lack of jurisdiction, of course he could not properly render judgment on the merits of the issue. So even if the view of the court as to limitations upon his power were correct, we would be required to dispose of the case by remanding it with directions jo go back to the point where the error was committed and “cease all further proceedings.” This would require the dismissal of the garnishment proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P.2d 1000, 41 N.M. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-garage-v-jasper-nm-1937.