Court Opinion

ID: 7962531
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:47:36.949807+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:32.334752
License: Public Domain

Berry, J.
By the Court Walters brought an action before a justice of the peace against the appellant Troyer, the summons being served by publication under chap. 38, Laws 1860, and the respondents being summoned as garnishees under chap. 70, Laws 1860. Judgment was rendered against Troyer, (who did not appear,) as well as against the garnishees. The garnishees paid the amount of the judgment to the justice, and in the language of the record “ such payment was made by said Emmert and Schweizer, without any execution being issued against them, voluntarily, at the instruction of said justice, and upon demand of said Walters’ attorney, stating that unless it was^paid, he should issue execution.” Subsequently to the payment, and within one year after the rendition of the judgment, Troyer was permitted to appear before the justice and defend the action brought as aforesaid by Walters. Upon a hearing, the judgment in favor of Walters was set aside, and judgment rendered in favor of Troyer. This latter judgment was affirmed in the district court upon appeal by Walters. Troyer brings the present action to recover of the respondents the amount paid by them, as aforesaid, and from the judgment rendered in this action in the district court, in favor of the respondents, Troyer appeals to this court.
In the action instituted by Walters, the plaintiff (Walters) was authorized to proceed as he did to final judgment against Troyer, (sec. 3, ch. 38, Laws 1860) as well as [against the garnishees. Sections 13, 14, 24, ch. 70, Laws 1860. *244Upon this judgment the justice had the right, and it was his duty to issue execution, at any time on demand. Sec. 89, ch. 59, Pub. Stat.
As the justice had the right, and the money which might be realized upon an execution was payable to the justice, (sec. 90, ch. 59, Pub. Stat.) the garnishees were justified in making payment directly to the justice, upon demand of Walters’ attorney, without waiting for the issue of execution. And under sec. 32, ch. 70, Laws 1860, such payment operated to “ acquit and discharge ” the garnishees from all claim on the part of Troyer for the amount so paid. Although it is true as urged, that the judgment was subject to be set aside during a year after its rendition, there is nothing in the statute which justifies the position taken by Troyer’s counsel, that the garnishees paid prematurely, because they did not wait until the expiration of the year, before they paid the judgment.
It is further argued that Walters could take no legal steps to collect his judgment, until the provisions of secs. 4 and 5 ch. 38, laws 1860, had been complied with, by the filing of a transcript, bond, &c., in the district court; that the justice had no authority to issue execution; that execution where the justice’s summons was served by publication could issue out of the- district court only, and that as no transcript or bond was filed in this instance, neither Walters, nor the justice, had any right to receive, or the garnishees any right to pay the judgment.
To this we answer, that the statute did not require any bond to be filed witli the justice, it did not forbid him to issue execution, nor make the filing of the transcript and bond in the district court a condition precedent to his right to issue execution under the general rule enacted in sec. 89, ch. 59, Pub. Stat., before cited. This was perhaps an im*245perfection and inconsistency in tbe statute, which it is not for us to remedy in this case, though the legislature would appear to have attended to it for the future, in sec. 68, ch. 65, Gen. Stat. and ch. 74, laws 1869.
Judgment affirmed.