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Craig v. Barber Bros. Contr. Co.

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Feb 10, 1941
199 So. 270 (Miss. 1941)

Summary

stating that "[i]n this state, appeals are regulated by statute and only allowed in cases provided by statute"

Summary of this case from Jones v. City of Ridgeland

Opinion

No. 34488.

December 23, 1940. Suggestion of Error Overruled February 10, 1941.

1. APPEAL AND ERROR.

Appeals are regulated by statute and only allowed in cases provided by statute (Code 1930, secs. 13, 168).

2. APPEAL AND ERROR.

Appeals from interlocutory orders or decrees apply only to cases in chancery court.

3. APPEAL AND ERROR.

An appeal from an order or a judgment vacating a writ of garnishment and dismissing suit as against the garnishee where garnishment is issued as part of attachment writ in a suit which is still pending in the trial court at the time the appeal is allowed is prematurely taken and may be dismissed on motion (Code 1930, secs. 13, 168).

4. ATTACHMENT. Garnishment.

An "attachment writ" and a "garnishment writ" may be incorporated into one process, but they are essentially different in character, the former being directed against property of the principal defendant and in his possession or under his control, whereas the object of the latter is to reach an indebtedness due him by a third person or property in the possession or under the control of a third person belonging to the principal defendant.

5. GARNISHMENT.

Where writ of attachment and writ of garnishment are incorporated into one process, the quashing of writ of garnishment does not of itself discharge writ of attachment.

SMITH, C.J., and McGOWEN, J., dissenting.

APPEAL from the circuit court of Hinds county, HON. J.P. ALEXANDER, Judge.

E.R. Holmes, Jr., Assistant Attorney-General, for appellee, State Highway Commission, on motion to dismiss.

Section 168, Code of 1930, is not applicable here for the reason that the case is still pending on the docket of the circuit court of Hinds county, and this appeal therefrom is premature as it is not an appeal from a final judgment of the court. The order quashing the writ of garnishment is an interlocutory order as to the defendants named therein only. The act of the lower court in quashing the writ of garnishment and discharging the defendants, State Highway Commission, State Auditor, and State Treasurer, was in accordance with the holding of this court in Dollman v. Moore, 70 Miss. 267; Dollar v. Allen, etc., 78 Miss. 274; McBain v. Rodgers, 29 So. 91, and other cases.

This court has held in the case of Martin Wunderlich v. State Highway Commission, 183 Miss. 428, that the Highway Department is liable on its highway contracts just as any individual or private corporation is liable on or for breach of a private contract. In this case, after the quashing of the writ of garnishment but not the quashing of the writ of attachment, the Highway Department, if it had not paid to the contractors the funds due them, when due, would have been liable in damages for breach of contract. Acting on the advice of this office, it paid over such funds to such contractors because Section 168 says that appeal shall preserve the attachment in full force where it is an appeal from a judgment rendered against plaintiff "discharging his attachment." The attachment was not discharged. The funds are no longer impounded. The Highway Department paid the amount as required by its contracts. The appeal is premature, and we think it should be dismissed.

W.E. Gore, of Jackson, for appellant, on motion to dismiss.

Section 168 of the Code of 1930 is relied on as authority supporting appellant's right to appeal, with the effect that "the attachment shall not be discharged, nor garnishees nor property released therefrom, by such judgment, but such appeal shall preserve the attachment in full force, to await the result of the appeal."

Appeals rest on statutory authority alone, except where the right rests on the constitution. Of the constitutional authority of the Legislature to grant the right, there can be no doubt. The power to grant appeals necessarily implies the power to prescribe both the conditions and the effect.

The attachment was discharged as to the garnishees by the judgment rendered by the circuit judge. By its very language, the statute forecloses any question whatever that the garnishees shall be discharged. So far as the garnishees are concerned, the judgment is final, for its language is that the "same hereby are quashed and this suit hereby is dismissed as to them and they are hereby discharged from answering further herein."

The return of the writ shows the principal defendant not found and does not show any levy on property. So far as the record shows, the lawsuit ended with the entry of the circuit judge's order. The only thing under the control of the circuit court was the money owing by the garnishees. Power over this vanished when the order was entered.

The correctness of the action of the circuit judge in dismissing the suit as to the garnishees is not here involved. That is meat for another day. Dollman v. Moore, Dollar v. Allen, and McBain v. Rodgers will have our attention in due time, that is, when this appeal is reached on the docket of this court.

Argued orally by W.E. Gore and H.H. Creekmore, for appellant, and by E.R. Holmes, Jr., for appellee.


The motion is to dismiss the appeal herein granted from an order or a judgment of the circuit court of Hinds County quashing certain garnishments served upon the State Highway Commission, State Auditor, and State Treasurer, and dismissing the suit as to the garnishees, but wherein the court expressly declined to quash the writ of attachment against the principal defendant.

On September 18, 1940, the appellant, as State Tax Collector, filed an affidavit for an attachment against Barber Brothers Contracting Company, a foreign corporation, to enforce the collection of an alleged indebtedness from the said non-resident in favor of the state, and suggested therein that the garnishees above named had money and effects of the said foreign corporation in their hands and under their control; and prayed that writs of garnishment be issued against them. Thereupon a writ of attachment was immediately issued as prayed for against the estate, both real and personal, of the said Barber Brothers Contracting Company on the sole ground of its non-residence, and there was embodied in the writ the suggested garnishments. On the following day the process was served upon each of the garnishees and the return of the officer was accordingly made on the writ of attachment wherein the garnishment feature of the process was embodied, and he retained the writ in his possession to be executed on any estate, real or personal, that might be found in his county belonging to the principal defendant, Barber Brothers Contracting Company.

The circuit court was then in regular session, but this dual writ of attachment and garnishments was not returnable until the third Monday in February, 1941, since the suit was not filed in time to require an appearance at the term then in session. The garnishees, however, went before the court on September 28 and obtained a hearing, over the objection of the appellant, upon a motion filed only in their own behalf to dismiss the writ of attachment, quash the garnishments, and dismiss the suit insofar as they were concerned on the ground that the State Highway Commission is an agency of the state engaged in the carrying out of governmental functions and that neither the said commission nor the other state officials are subject to garnishment over their objection or otherwise. No ground for quashing the attachment was assigned in this motion, nor does any reason appear from the record for quashing the same since the affidavit for the attachment as against the non-resident and principal defendant is in due form and no issue has yet been made as to whether the indebtedness alleged therein is due in favor of the plaintiff.

The motion to quash was sustained on September 28 to the extent only of vacating the writs of garnishment and dismissing the suit as to the garnishees, and on October 1 the appeal here was granted and taken from that order or judgment. Four days later the sheriff made his return as to the attachment against the principal defendant stating that this defendant was not found in his county, but no return was made as to whether he had levied the writ upon any real or personal estate in the possession or under control of the principal defendant in the county. We understand, however, from the argument of counsel at the bar that no such property was found.

Thus it will be seen that at the time the appeal was taken the sheriff still had the attachment writ in his possession for execution, and that the plaintiff was entitled under the affidavit then pending to have issued, subsequently to the return made on the original writ, any alias writs of attachment at any time prior to the return day of this suit on the third Monday in February, 1941. And at the time of the taking of the appeal, no process by publication or otherwise had been obtained on the principal defendant, nor had it entered an appearance.

Section 168, Code of 1930, reads as follows: "Attachment preserved by appeal. — If the plaintiff, within ten days after the expiration of the term of the court at which judgment is rendered discharging his attachment, shall perfect an appeal from such judgment, the attachment shall not be discharged, nor garnishees nor property released therefrom, by such judgment; but such appeal shall preserve the attachment in full force, to await the result of the appeal."

It will therefore be seen that this statute only provides what the effect of an appeal shall be when taken from a judgment discharging the attachment. It authorizes an appeal in that instance. Otherwise, an appeal from the circuit court to the Supreme Court is governed by Section 13, Code of 1930, which provides for an appeal from any final judgment of the circuit court. In this state, appeals are regulated by statute and only allowed in cases provided by statute. State v. Poplarville Sawmill Co., 119 Miss. 432, 81 So. 124; Jones v. Cashin, 133 Miss. 585, 98 So. 98. No statute is called to our attention, nor are we able to find one which authorizes an appeal from an order or a judgment vacating a writ of garnishment and dismissing the suit as to a garnishee where the garnishment is issued as a part of an attachment writ in a suit which is still pending in the trial court at the time the appeal is allowed. If such appeals could be maintained, then it would follow that where numerous persons are served with garnishments, there could be as many appeals taken in a case as there are orders granted from time to time vacating writs of garnishment prior to the final hearing on the attachment issue. Appeals from interlocutory orders or decrees apply only to cases in the chancery court, and no contention is here made to the contrary, but the appellant relies on said Section 168, Code of 1930, dealing with the effect of an appeal on the rights of garnishees when the appeal is from a judgment discharging an attachment.

It is true that the order vacating the garnishments and dismissing the suit as to the garnishees was final as to them, but that is likewise true in other cases at law where a demurrer of one defendant is sustained to a declaration and the suit is dismissed as to him upon the failure of the plaintiff to amend, and wherein no appeal is allowable until final judgment in the case as to the other defendant. For instance it was held in the case of Dickerson v. Western Union Tel. Co., et al., 111 Miss. 264, 71 So. 385, that a Statute of Limitation governing appeals did not commence to run from the date of a judgment sustaining a demurrer and dismissing a suit as to one of the defendants, and the decision is based on the lack of finality of such judgment as to both defendants. See, also, State ex rel. Rice, Attorney-General, v. Large, 171 Miss. 330, 157 So. 694, and Bank of Courtland v. Long Creek Drainage District, 133 Miss. 531, 97 So. 881, which, although not in point on the question here involved, are persuasive.

It is unnecessary to decide the question as to whether or not a trial court is vested with the authority to quash a writ of garnishment in an attachment suit prior to the return day of either of the writs, and in the absence or over the objection of any person who may be interested in the fund against which the garnishment is issued and who may be entitled to have his rights determined at the return term of the suit. We decide only the question that the appeal here is prematurely taken, and that the motion to dismiss should be sustained.

While it is true that a writ of attachment and a writ of garnishment may be incorporated into one process, they are essentially different in character, the former being directed against property of the principal defendant and in his possession or under his control, while the object of the latter is to reach an indebtedness due him by a third person or property in the possession or under the control of a third person belonging to such defendant. Therefore, the quashing of the latter writ does not of itself discharge the former.

Motion to dismiss appeal sustained.


DISSENTING OPINION.


The opinion in chief is based on too narrow a construction of Section 168, Code of 1930. "Garnishment is a form of attachment by which property of a defendant in the hands of a garnishee, or a debt due a defendant by a garnishee, is seized and applied to the payment of the judgment recovered against the defendant." National City Bank of St. Louis v. Stupp Bros. Bridge Iron Co., 147 Miss. 747, 113 So. 340, 341; 4 Am. Juris., Attachment and Garnishment, Section 4. Consequently, in order to carry out the purpose and intent of Section 168, it should be applied to a garnishment which has been discharged. The draftsman of the section evidently had in mind the usual and orderly way for dealing with attachments for debt on which garnishments have been issued — that is, for the trial court to either sustain or discharge the attachment before taking up other issues in the case, and if the attachment is discharged the garnishments issued thereon are also discharged as of course. Nevertheless, if the garnishments are taken up out of order before the attachment is disposed of, and the garnishments discharged the spirit of the statute, and as a garnishment is a form of attachment, the letter thereof applies thereto. Of course, the merits of the case, that is, whether error was committed in the discharge of this garnishment, are not before us.

The motion should be overruled.

McGowen, J., joins in this dissent.


Summaries of

Craig v. Barber Bros. Contr. Co.

Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc
Feb 10, 1941
199 So. 270 (Miss. 1941)

stating that "[i]n this state, appeals are regulated by statute and only allowed in cases provided by statute"

Summary of this case from Jones v. City of Ridgeland

In Craig v. Barber Bros. Contracting Co., 190 Miss. 182, 187, 199 So. 270, 272 (1941), we held: "In this state, appeals are regulated by statute and only allowed in cases provided by statute.... Appeals from interlocutory orders or decrees apply only to cases in the chancery court, and no contention is here made to the contrary.

Summary of this case from Marshall v. State
Case details for

Craig v. Barber Bros. Contr. Co.

Case Details

Full title:CRAIG, STATE TAX COLLECTOR, v. BARBER BROS. CONTRACTING CO. et al

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, In Banc

Date published: Feb 10, 1941

Citations

199 So. 270 (Miss. 1941)
199 So. 270

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