Court Opinion

ID: 3967076
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:26:29.040403+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:06.419900
License: Public Domain

The judgment in this cause was affirmed by the Court of Appeals at its last term at this place, and on motion of appellant a new hearing was granted, and the cause comes to this court for disposition.
There are two questions presented, viz.: First. Is the amount sued for and recovered below due as current wages for personal services? Second. If it is, can it be offset by a debt due to appellant from appellee, which is in no way connected with it?
The facts are, that appellant employed appellee to nurse him during an attack of sickness, promising to pay him well for his services. There was no agreement fixing the compensation to be paid, either for the entire service, or by the hour, day, week, or month.
Appellant, before the present suit was brought, but after the controversy arose, procured an assignment from one Mrs. Harrison of a debt which appellee owed her for board, and pleaded it as a setoff when sued by appellee. The court below held that the sum due appellee was for current wages for personal services, and could not be offset as attempted.
The meaning of the language "current wages for personal services," was considered by the Court of Appeals in First National Bank v. Graham, and the terms were defined as follows: "Current means running, now passing or present in its progress. Wages means a compensation given to a hired person for his services. Current wages are such compensation for personal services as are to be paid periodically, or from time to time, as the services are rendered; as when the services are to be paid for by the hour, day, week, month, or year. The services rendered must be such as that the compensation therefor is measured by the time of the continuance of the service." It was held that the fee of an attorney is not exempt from garnishment "where he has not been hired for his services by the day, week, month, or year, to be paid at the expiration of the time for which he was hired, and not in proportion to the business done." *Page 286 
In case of Lydnor v. The City of Galveston, 15 South western Reporter, 202, the same court held, that the fees of a physician, where he was employed and his compensation fixed per diem, were exempt. See also Bell v. Live Stock Company, 11 Southwestern Reporter, 344, in which the meaning of "current wages" is discussed, but not authoritatively decided.
The difference between the first case and this seems to be, that in the former an attorney was employed at a compensation fixed for given services, without regard to time; while here no compensation was agreed on, but the amount appellee should receive necessarily depended upon the length of time he served.
The mere circumstance that the rate of compensation is not agreed on in advance ought not, in our opinion, to take the case out of the exemption. In nursing, appellee was actually occupied by the day, and his right to compensation accrued as he served, being measured by customary or reasonable rates rather than by express contract. The remuneration to which he thereby became entitled was certainly "compensation to a hired person for services;" and it was current, because it was accruing during the continuance of his service, and because its amount was measured by the time of his employment. The contract, it is true, did not fix the rate for stated periods of time, nor can we see anything in the language of the law to make the exemption depend on that circumstance. The accrual of his right to payment for his services was concurrent with the time during which he rendered them.
The language used in the opinions referred to must be restricted to the facts of the cases then before the court.
We therefore hold that the sum due appellee was correctly held to be current wages for personal services.
The question remains whether or not the demand for current wages could be offset by an ordinary debt.
We will limit our decision to the facts of this case. The statute provides, that "the following property shall be exempt from attachment or execution, or every other species of forced sale for the payment of debts," and in the enumeration of subjects exempted includes "all current wages for personal services." This language is used with reference to property which is usually subjected to payment of debts by the writs named. The terms employed would be wholly inapplicable if used with reference to debts due for wages alone, for they are not reached by being levied upon. They had already been exempted from garnishment by the Constitution and by the statute. Rev. Stats., art. 218; Const., art. 16, sec. 28. The mention of them in the provision above quoted was intended, in our judgment, to express the legislative intent that they should not be subjected to debt in any way except by the consent of the debtor; *Page 287 
in other words, that they should be exempted from an enforced application to the discharge of debts. We need not consider what discounts arising out of the transactions between the master and servant, pending the employment of the latter, the former may deduct from the wages in settlement. No such questions arise here. The setoff pleaded accrued to another person, and had no connection with the contract of service, so far as the answer alleges. Had Mrs. Harrison garnished appellant, she could not have reached by that process the debt which he owed appellee, and, in our opinion, she can not accomplish the same result indirectly by assigning the claim and having it pleaded as a setoff. This question is decided in Colier v. Murphy, 16 Southwestern Reporter, 465 (Tennessee). See, also, William Deering Co. v. Ruffner, 49 Northwestern Reporter, 771.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.