Court Opinion

ID: 7979108
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:03:20.741948+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:59.667540
License: Public Domain

Pbb Cubiam.
In this action for the recovery of $63.75 from defendant, a garnishee summons was served on the garnishee April 17, 1917, and notice thereof served upon defendant the next day. On the return day the garnishee appeared before the clerk and made disclosure. Defendant did not appear. The disclosure of the garnishee showed this situation: He had the contract with the owner for the erection of a building in Canby, and- sublet to defendant the ornamental plastering work at the agreed price of $390. At the time the garnishee summons was served defendant had completed his work; he had been paid $150 on account before this, and, as the garnishee testified, there was $150 due defendant at the time of the service. The garnishee further disclosed that in May, 1917, after the garnishee summons was served but before the return day, defendant issued three orders on the garnishee in favor of a materialman and two laborers. These orders aggregated about $130. Liens were not filed against the property. The orders have not been paid by the garnishee. On this disclosure plaintiff moved for judgment against the garnishee for the amount of his claim against defendant, which had been in the meantime reduced to judgment. The court denied this motión, and discharged the garnishee. From this order plaintiff appeals to this court.
We are unable to sustain the order appealed from. The disclosure showed clearly that the garnishee owed defendant $150 at the time the garnishee *508summons was served. The orders had not been presented or even given at that time.
The court said there was no question but that each claimant was entitled to the amount stated in his orders, and that each had a lien upon the building to the amount of his claim, though no lien statements were ever filed, and the time had expired when the motion for judgment was heard. We find no evidence whatever that the claims were valid or that the claimants were ever entitled to a lien on the property of the owner. The fact that the orders were given is no evidence that the claims were valid. It was necessary, and would have been, though the orders were prior to the garnishment, to prove the indebtedness upon which they were based before a denial of the motion for judgment would be proper. The burden was on the claimants to plead and prove that the fund belonged to them. Conroy v. Ferree, 68 Minn. 325, 71 N. W. 383.
In short, the disclosure of the garnishee showed conclusively that he was indebted to defendant in the sum of $150 at the time the garnishee summons was served, and the evidence in regard to the giving of the orders failed to show that the claimants had any right to the fund.
The order is reversed with directions to grant the motion of plaintiff for judgment against the garnishee.