Court Opinion

ID: 6565924
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:19:46.043446+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:43.986430
License: Public Domain

Chief Justice Musseb
delivered the opinion of the court:
The action below was upon an attachment bond given by plaintiffs in error in an attachment proceeding against the defendant in error. A writ of garnishment was served in the attachment proceeding, and the garnishee answered that he owed the defendant in attachment between $5,500 and $6,000, the exact amount of which he could not determine until a set-off or claim for poor nursery stock was adjusted. The defendant had sold nursery stock to the garnishee for an amount certain and liquidated. The garnishee was claiming a set-off because part of the stock was not good. This claim had not been adjusted at the time of the garnishment. Later on the attachment was dissolved, and thereupon the garnishee and defendant adjusted the claim for set-*439off and the garnishee paid to the defendant $5,500. In the action on the bond, the court, as one item of damage, allowed interest on the $5,500 while it was held up by the garnishment.
The plaintiff in error contends that the court erred in allowing this interest. He says that the creditor’s claim for nursery stock was unliquidated and that it would not have drawn interest if not attached, so that no actual damage was proven on that account. It was not the claim of the creditor against the garnishee that was unliquidated. This was fixed and certain. It was the claim of set-off by the ,garnishee that was unliquidated. The creditor’s claim was one that would draw interest under the statutes of this state if no set-off was claimed. The debtor admitted that he owed at least $5,500 of this claim all the time, and it was on this undisputed amount that interest was allowed as damages in the action on the bond. Certainly a debtor can not defeat the running of interest against him for the part of a debt which he admits that he owes, and which would otherwise draw interest, by simply making a claim of an unliquidated set-off against the whole debt. In principle at least the following authorities are against the contention of plaintiff in error.—McCowen v. Few, 12 Cal. Ap. 482, 123 Pac. 354; Harwood ads. Tappen & Noble, 2 Speer, (S. C.) 536; Smith v. Turner, 33 Ore. 379, 54 Pac. 166.
The judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Mr. Justice G-arrigues and Mr. Justice Scott concur.