Court Opinion

ID: 8183226
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:05:16.147214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:19.304099
License: Public Domain

Taylor, J.
It is claimed by the learned counsel for the appellants that theji" had the right to appeal from the order made by the justice, under sec. 3725, R. S., before any judgment was entered on such order as provided in sec. 3726, R. S. In this we think he is mistaken. The order directing the garnishees to pay the money into court within ten days, made under sec. 3725, can only be enforced by an entry of judgment as prescribed in sec. 3726. It is no more a judgment from which an appeal can be taken than is a verdict of a jury assessing the plaintiff’s damages, or a finding of a court fixing the amount of damages. The statute giving the right of appeal from the decisions in justices’ courts only gives the right to appeal from final judgment. The language of sec. 3753, R. S., is as follows: “ Any party to a final judgment rendered by a justice of the peace, and, when a judgment shall be rendered against a garnishee, the defendant in the original action, may appeal therefrom;” etc. No appeal is given except from a final judgment. That the order made' under sec. 3725, R. S., is not final, is evident from the fact that the next section provides for a final judgment on default-of the garnishee to comply with the order made under sec. 3725, R. S. It is clear no execution could be issued on the order, nor could it be enforced by proceedings for contempt for a refusal to pay the money directed to be paid. It is in the nature of an interlocutory order made in an action in a court of record.
It is equally clear to us that ch. 24, Laws of 1883, does *312not change the rule and give the right to appeal from an order made under sec. 3125, R. S., requiring the garnishee to pay money into court. The object of the amendment of sec. 3726, R. S., by ch. 21, Laws of 18S3, was first to direct for what sum judgment should be rendered against tho garnishee in case he had been ordered to deliver property to the justice under the provisions of sec. 3725, R. S., and which he had failed to comply with. The language of the section on this subject is as follows: “(1) If the value of the property in the possession of the garnishee, as found by the justice or jury, shall be less or equal to the judgment against the principal debtor for damages and costs, then for the value so found. (2) If the value of the property in the possession of the garnishee, as found by the justice or jury, shall exceed the amount of the judgment for damages and costs against the principal defendant, then for the amount of the judgment for damages and costs against the principal defendant, with the costs of suit in the action in which he is garnishee, not exceeding the value as found by the justice or jury.” Another object of the statute was to confer upon the plaintiff in the garnishee action the right to take a judgment, not for the value of the property in the hands of the garnishee, but for the delivery of the property itself. So the section goes on to provide as follows: “The plaintiff, at his election,instead of taking judgment as aforesaid for the value as so found against the garnishee, may enforce the delivery of the property found in his hands by proceedings as for a contempt, in case of the garnishee’s refusal to deliver‘the property found in his possession pursuant to the order of the justice requiring such delivery.” The act then proceeds to add: “ An appeal may be taken from any order of the justice directing the delivery of the property in the garnishee’s possession the same as if from a judgment.”
It seems to us very clear that the right to appeal from *313an order made by a justice in garnishee proceedings is from “ an order for the delivery of the property in the garnishee’s possession,” and not from an order directing him to pay into court the amount of any indebtedness from the garnishee to the defendant in the principal action. A clear distinction is made in both sections between an order to pay money and an order to deliver property, and the appeal from the order is given in the one case and not in the other. Some of the difficulties and inconsistencies of allowing an appeal from the order to pay money into court, and at the same time allowing the justice to enter judgment upon the order if not complied with in ten days, are referred to in Eilers v. Wood, 64 Wis. 422, 424. What was said in that case as to the right of the garnishee to appeal from an order to pay money into courtis not res adjudícala in this court, as that was not the point in the case upon which the decision therein was based. The decision in that case was based upon the construction of sec. 3772, R. S., and not upon the construction of sec. 3726, as amended.
By the Court.— The order and judgment of the circuit court are affirmed.