Court Opinion

ID: 3660814
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:12:26.527189+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:36:00.924176
License: Public Domain

This was a suit by the plaintiffs, who are citizens of North Carolina, against Judah  Block, merchants of New York, commenced 2 February, 1842, by original attachment returnable to the February Term, 1842, of Washington County Court.
Josiah Collins, the present defendant, was summoned as a garnishee, and at the said term filed his answer, in which he stated that Hugh W. Collins was indebted to the defendants Judah  Block upon a draft on account of C. C. Taber for about $960.93, accepted by the said Hugh W. Collins, with interest from 24 October, 1840; that some time after making this acceptance, the said Hugh conveyed all his real and personal estate to George W. Barney and the said garnishee for the purpose of having the same appropriated towards the payments of the debts of him, the said Hugh; that there was due on the said acceptance of the said Hugh, on 1 December, 1841, for principal and interest, about the sum of $1,023.65; that, according to an estimate which the said garnishee caused to be made of the debts of the said Hugh and of the funds that would, when received, be applicable to the payment of those (487) debts, the holder or owner of the said acceptance would be entitled to receive $798.45, being a loss of 22 per cent; that there was not, at the filing of the said garnishment, nor at the time of serving the said attachment, any money belonging to the trust aforesaid applicable to the said debt; that the money received under the trust had been applied to the payment of certain debts mentioned in the said trust, and for the remainder of the sales of the property conveyed by the deed of trust the garnishee then held notes or obligations then not due; that a further divided than that arising from the sales already made might be expected by the creditors of the said Hugh, but what the amount would be could not be ascertained until the settlement of his grandfather's estate.
The said garnishee further stated that he had understood that the aforesaid Judah  Block had assigned the above mentioned claim against Hugh W. Collins to one Zalma Rehine before the serving of the plaintiff's attachment, and that the said garnishee was advised, and now insisted, that inasmuch as he held only as trustee, whatever might be in or come to his hands of the estate of the said Hugh applicable to the claim of Judah 
Block could not be attached.
At March Term, 1844, of Washington Superior Court, having been brought there by appeal from the county court, this cause came on for trial, when an issue was submitted to the jury to try whether the assignment from Judah Block to Zalma Rehine, dated 18 January, 1842, *Page 356 
was executed before the plaintiff's attachment was served. The jury found that the assignment was not executed before the serving of the attachment. The counsel for the garnishee admitted that since the answer of the garnishee was filed, the said sum of $798.45 had been received by the garnishee, but insisted that the same was held by the garnishee as trustee and was not subject to attachment; that there (488) was no privity of contract between Judah  Block and the garnishee Collins, and that as the former could not maintain an action at law against the latter, the said sum was not subject to the attachment.
His Honor was of opinion that the said Josiah Collins was liable as garnishee, and pronounced judgment of condemnation accordingly. From this judgment the garnishee appealed to the Supreme Court.
The defendants in this case are citizens of and resident within the State of New York, and the plaintiffs, under the act of the General Assembly, commenced their action by an attachment. The attachment served was upon Josiah Collins, and he summoned as a garnishee. In his garnishment, he states that Hugh W. Collins, becoming indebted to the defendants in this action, conveyed to him and another person all of his property in trust to pay this debt, together with others; that after paying the other debts mentioned in the trust from the proceeds of the property so conveyed, there remained in his hands $798 liable to the claim of the defendants, which sum was insufficient for its discharge. The garnishment then submits the question to the (490) court, whether the money in his hands is liable to the process of attachment. His Honor who tried the cause, being of opinion that it was, gave judgment against the garnishee, condemning the money in his hands to the use of the plaintiff, from which judgment the garnishee appealed to this Court.
We think the opinion is erroneous, and that the money in the hands of Mr. Collins is not liable to the plaintiff's claim in the way in which he seeks to subject it.
The language of the attachment law, in describing the interests of a debtor liable to its operation, is very comprehensive. It authorizes the issuing the process "against the estate of the debtor wherever the same may be found, or in the hands of any person or persons indebted to or having any of the effects of the defendant." Rev. Stat., ch. 6, sec. 1. In pointing out the oath of a garnishee, it directs that he shall upon oath state "what he is indebted to the defendant, and what effects of the *Page 357 
defendant he hath or had in his hands at the time of serving the attachment" (section 6). It then sets forth the judgment to be pronounced by the court against the garnishee when, from his garnishment, any judgment can be pronounced against him. "It shall be lawful, upon his appearance and examination, to enter up judgment and award execution against any such garnishee for all sums of money due to the defendant from him and for all effects and estate of any kind belonging to the defendant in his possession or custody."
This language, upon its face, is comprehensive enough to embrace every species of property which the garnishee may have in his possession or custody belonging to the defendant in the action and all moneys which he may owe him, regardless of the character in which he may hold the one or owe the other.
In the construction of statutes, it has become an established maxim,qui haeret in litera haeret in cortice, and the courts, in carrying this statute into execution, found it necessary to depart from its letter. This was necessary in order to give efficacy to the legislative will, which consists more in the substance of their enactment than in the mere words in which it is clothed, and also to preserve the symmetry of the law. The first decision on this branch of the act of which we have any (491) report in Alston v. Clay, 3 N.C. 172. The Court then decided that money paid into the hands of a clerk on an execution was not the subject of an attachment against the plaintiff in the execution.
Taylor, J., in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: "It has been several times decided that money in the hands of a sheriff cannot be attached. Those decisions are analogous to the present. They were made on the ground that judgments of courts of justice should be effectual." The same principle was decided in Overton v. Hill, 5 N.C. 47, and in the late case of Hunt v. Stephens, 25 N.C. 365.
In the first case cited (Alston v. Clay) the Court considered it as settled law, at that time, that money in the hands of a sheriff, received by virtue of his office, cannot be attached.
In Orr v. McBryde, 4 N.C. 236, they affirm the doctrine, "because, say the Court, it would interfere with the rights of others, embarrass, and sometimes render ineffectual the process of the Court and produce endless litigation." In this latter case, however, they decide that "a surplus of money remaining in his hands is liable to attachment, because it is not in his hands virtute officii." The precept commanded him to raise a particular sum and return that to court; all over that amount, whether taken from the defendant in the execution or received on the sale of property, belongs to the defendant, and is held by the sheriff for his use, and might have been immediately demanded of him and its payment enforced, and consequently any creditor of the defendant entitled *Page 358 
to the benefit of the attachment law might subject it to his claim. InElliott v. Newby, 9 N.C. 22, it was held by the Court that the interest which the next of kin had in negroes, in the hands of the administrator, was not liable, under the attachment law, to the claims of a creditor. The reason assigned is because a court of law is incompetent to take an account of the assets, to order a payment on terms, to have all the (492) parties interested in the fund before the court, for the safety of the administrator. The first time that the question came before the courts, so far as deeds of trust were affected, was in Peace v. Johns,7 N.C. 256. In this case the Court decided, as in Orr v. McBryde, that a surplus remaining in the hands of a trustee after the payment of the debts secured by the deed of trust was money due to the cestui que trust, for which he could maintain an action of indebitatus assumpsit, and was therefore liable under the attachment law to the claim of a creditor of his; and they say further, "It seems to be a better criterion, whether property be liable to attachment to ascertain what would be the rights of the defendant in the attachment against the garnishee than to inquire whether the property would be liable to execution against the defendant."
Gillis v. McKay, 15 N.C. 172, is we think, in principle, decisive of this. It decides the general question, that when a trustee holds slaves to divide among several persons, at different times, the interest of a cestuique trust cannot be attached in the hands of the trustee. It became necessary for the Court to decide whether under the act of the General Assembly subjecting equitable interests to execution, ch. 830, Rev. Code, (Rev. Stat., ch. 45 s. 4,) the case before them came within its operation. They decide that it did not, because the trust was created, not alone for the benefit of the defendants in the attachment, Judah  Block, but for others no way concerned with them. It is not, in the language of the Chief Justice, a pure trust, on which alone the act operated. In the language of the Court in Elliott v. Newby, the better criterion to decide whether in such case, as the present, the property sold by the trustee is subject to attachment, is to enquire what would be the rights of the defendants in the attachment. Apply that rule to this case; could Judah   Block have maintained an action at law to recover the sum now (493) sought to be recovered by the plaintiffs in this action? Very clearly they could not; their only redress would have been in a court of equity, where all persons interested in the fund would have been before the court, and the interests of all parties properly protected. The garnishment discloses that the available funds in the hands of the garnishee are not sufficient to liquidate the demands secured by the trust, but that they had to abate pro rata, and that other funds might still come into his hands, belonging to the cestuis que trust, from the estate *Page 359 
of a grandfather. All these facts present questions which could be settled properly only in a court of equity. Nor do we conceive that it would have made any difference in this case, if the other debts secured by the trust had been fully discharged, and the whole of the money now in the hands of the garnishee was applicable solely to the debt of Judah  Block. To recover it they would have been compelled to go into a court of equity.
From the principles established by the cases which have been reviewed, we are of opinion that the money in the hands of the trustee, Josiah Collins, was not liable to the attachment of the plaintiffs, and that the interlocutory judgment in this case is erroneous.
PER CURIAM.                                              Reversed.
Cited: Anderson v. Doak, 32 N.C. 297.
(494)