Court Opinion

ID: 6422144
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:00:51.203699+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:49.276392
License: Public Domain

C. Allen, J.
The plaintiff contends that, although the writ was served upon the trustees several times, the various services constituted but one attachment; and that, when the second and all later services were made, the trustees were bound to bear in mind that they had already reserved and paid over eight dollars to the principal defendant, and that they were only entitled to reserve and pay over ten dollars in all. Pub. Sts. c. 183, §§ 8, 30. But we think the statutes should receive a broader construction. The intention was, to enable persons whose earnings are small and often payable to receive the whole of them, without the risk of their being intercepted by the trustee process. Otherwise, a diligent creditor, by making numerous successive services, could reach and appropriate a large portion of the earnings of persons *448who might be dependent upon the immediate product of their labor for the necessary support of themselves and their families. If the defendant had worked at the rate of eight dollars a week for four different persons in succession, a week for each, it would hardly be contended that the plaintiff, by summoning each of them as trustee as soon as his indebtedness to the defendant accrued, could hold the surplus of their united indebtedness to him, after reserving ten dollars. The defendant should not be any worse off because he continued in the employ of the same firm. It is more conformable to the obvious intention and policy of the statutes to hold that ten dollars shall be reserved at the time of each service. And such construction is in accordance with the spirit of the cases cited by the trustees.*

Trustees discharged.

 Carr v. Fairbanks, 28 Vt. 806. Collins v. Chase, 71 Maine, 434. Bliss v. Smith, 78 Ill. 359.