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Staton v. Vernon

Supreme Court of Iowa
Mar 11, 1930
229 N.W. 763 (Iowa 1930)

Summary

In Staton v. Vernon, 209 Iowa 1123, 229 N.W.2d 763 (1930), the judgment debtor had established that all of the funds in a garnished bank account were deposited from his personal earnings received within a ninety-day period prior to the levy.

Summary of this case from Midamerica Sav. Bank v. Miehe

Opinion

No. 40076.

March 11, 1930.

EXEMPTIONS: Nature and Extent — Personal Earnings Represented 1 by Bank Deposit. A joint bank deposit in the name of a husband and wife which represents the earnings of the husband for his personal services at any time within 90 days preceding a levy is exempt from an execution against both husband and wife, the wife being made a joint depositor as a matter of convenience in the payment of bills.

APPEAL AND ERROR: Review — Scope and Extent — Fact Findings of

Trial Court — Conclusiveness. Headnote 2:

Appeal and Error: 4 C.J., § 2646, p. 726, n. 15; § 2853, p. 876, n. 78; p. 877, n. 80. Exemptions: 25 C.J., § 110, p. 69, n. 73; § 114, p. 70, n. 6; § 314, p. 161, n. 55.

Appeal from Mahaska District Court. — JAMES G. PATTERSON, Judge.

Plaintiff is a judgment creditor of the defendants', and caused an execution to be issued on said judgment, and a bank to be garnished. On motion of defendants, the garnishee was discharged, and plaintiff appeals. — Affirmed.

C.C. Orvis, for appellant.

McCoy McCoy, for Harriett B. Vernon and J.S. Vernon, appellees.


I. On December 14, 1926, the appellant recovered judgment against the appellees in the sum of $516.45 and costs. On April 11, 1929, appellant caused an execution to issue on said judgment, and thereunder the garnishee Oskaloosa 1. EXEMPTIONS: National Bank was duly garnished. The answer of nature and the garnishee disclosed that there was on extent: deposit in said bank the sum of $ 384.74, which personal stood on the books of said bank in the name of earnings both of said appellees. On April 16, 1929, the represented appellees filed a motion for the discharge of by bank said garnishee, on the ground that the said sum deposit. so on deposit in said bank was personal earnings of the appellee J.S. Vernon, earned within ninety days prior to said garnishment. The motion was supported by affidavit. It appears of record that the said appellee, at and prior to said garnishment, was a resident of this state, a married man, and the head of a family. A trial was had on the said motion for discharge. The evidence in behalf of the appellees tended to show that the money in the hands of the garnishee at the time of the service of said garnishment was money which was the personal earnings of the appellee J.S. Vernon, which had been earned within ninety days prior to said garnishment. It appeared that the appellees had a continuous open account in the garnishee bank. It also affirmatively appeared that, during the last ninety days prior to the date of said garnishment, the appellee J.S. Vernon had deposited in said account the total sum of $ 446.20, and that $ 384.74 of said amount so deposited remained in said bank at the time of the said garnishment. The cashier of the bank testified that, if the said $ 446.20 had not been deposited in the bank within the last ninety days prior to the garnishment, there would not be any money in said account in said bank. The appellee J.S. Vernon testified that all of the money in the bank at the time of the garnishment was money that he had earned within the last ninety days as his wages; that all of the money in said account belonged to him; but that it was kept in his name and that of his wife, so that the latter could check on the account for the purpose of paying bills; that his wife had no money of her own in said account.

Section 11763, Code, 1927, is as follows:

"The earnings of a debtor, who is a resident of the state and the head of a family, for his personal services, or those of his family, at any time within ninety days next preceding the levy, are exempt from liability for debt."

The sole question for our determination is whether, under the record in this case, the said money in the hands of the garnishee bank is exempt. Where the personal earnings described in the statute have not been paid to the judgment debtor, but are owed to him by his debtor, they are exempt. If the earnings have been paid to the debtor and are still in his possession in their original form, they would be exempt. When such earnings have been paid to the judgment debtor and have been deposited by him in a bank, the fact that the identical money so deposited is not in the bank, but that the debtor has evidence of such deposit, in the form of a certificate of deposit, pass book, deposit slip, or otherwise, does not so change the character of the earnings as to deprive them of their exempt character. It would be an unreasonable construction to hold that, by the deposit of the earnings in the bank, the debtor had voluntarily parted with the money, and had acquired in lieu thereof a credit due to him from the bank, and therefore the exempt character of the money had been lost. That exempt earnings do not lose their exempt character by reason of such a deposit in the bank, see Holmes v. Marshall, 145 Cal. 777 ( 79 P. 534, 537); State ex rel. Lankford v. Collins, 70 Okla. 323 (174 P. 568, 572); Emmert v. Schmidt, 65 Kan. 31 (68 P. 1072); Rutter v. Shumway, 16 Colo. 95 (26 P. 321, 322). See, also, Cook v. Allee, 119 Iowa 226.

Under the record, the trial court was warranted in finding that all of the funds in the bank deposited in the name of the appellees, at the time of the garnishment, were the personal earnings of the appellee J.S. Vernon, and had been earned within ninety days prior to the garnishment. The conclusion of the court, having support in the evidence, will not be disturbed by us on appeal.

II. It is contended that, because the deposit in the bank was made in the name of both of the appellees, the appellee Harriett became a joint owner of said funds, and, appellant's judgment being against said Harriett, as well as against her husband, the said funds are subject to garnishment as the funds of the appellee Harriett. The record shows that the said funds were the personal earnings of the appellee J.S. Vernon; that the deposit was made in his name and in that of his wife solely as a matter of convenience, to enable the wife to draw checks against the same, for the purpose of paying bills. The evidence fails to show that the title to said funds or any portion of them was intended to be, or was in fact, vested in the said Harriett, but shows that said deposit was made in the form in which it was solely as a matter of convenience between the husband and wife. We are constrained to hold that, under the record in this case in regard to said matter, the deposit did not lose its exempt character. Sterman v. Hann, 160 Iowa 356.

III. Appellant contends that the appellees have failed to show 2. APPEAL AND by clear, satisfactory, and convincing evidence ERROR: that the said funds are exempt. In a proceeding review: of this character, the findings of the court scope and below upon the questions of fact presented will extent: fact be given the same weight as the verdict of a findings of jury. The case is not triable de novo in this trial court: court. Bell v. Courteen Seed Co., 197 Iowa 120. conclusive- The finding of the court has ness. support in the evidence, and upon the record, we are not disposed to interfere with said finding.

The order of the district court is — Affirmed.

MORLING, C.J., and EVANS, KINDIG, and GRIMM, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Staton v. Vernon

Supreme Court of Iowa
Mar 11, 1930
229 N.W. 763 (Iowa 1930)

In Staton v. Vernon, 209 Iowa 1123, 229 N.W.2d 763 (1930), the judgment debtor had established that all of the funds in a garnished bank account were deposited from his personal earnings received within a ninety-day period prior to the levy.

Summary of this case from Midamerica Sav. Bank v. Miehe

In Staton v. Vernon, 209 Iowa 1123, 229 N.W. 763, 764, a husband placed funds in a bank to the credit of both himself and his wife, with the right on the part of the wife to draw the funds out as she deemed proper.

Summary of this case from Andrew v. Helmer Gortner State Bank
Case details for

Staton v. Vernon

Case Details

Full title:NORA F. STATON, Appellant, v. HARRIETT B. VERNON et al., Appellees

Court:Supreme Court of Iowa

Date published: Mar 11, 1930

Citations

229 N.W. 763 (Iowa 1930)
229 N.W. 763

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