Armstrong v. Dargan & Mays
Armstrong v. Dargan & Mays
Opinion of the Court
Our statute prescribing the course of proceeding against garnishees, directs that conditional judgments shall be rendered when they fail to appear, “ upon which a scire facias shall issue against the garnishee returnable to the next term of the court, to show cause why final judgment should not be rendered against him, and upon such sci. fa. being duly executed and returned, if the garnishee shall fail to appear according to the mandate thereof, and discover, &c. the court shall confirm such judgment,” &c. [Dig. 59, § 20.] The question is, whether the execution of the sci. fa. here spoken of is a personal service on the garnishee, or whether it refers to the ordinary course of proceeding by that writ. Although the statute is not entirely clear, we think it must be intended to refer to the general course of practice peculiar to this writ, as otherwise we must presume the framer of the enactment ignorant of the rule which declares that two returns of nihil or non est is equivalent to execution of the process. There is strong reason to put this construction on the statute, as a subsequent enactment, providing for proceedings against a transferee of the debt owing by the garnishee, directs expressly that two notices returned not found shall in that case authorize the court to proceed. [Digest, 63, § 41.]
The general course of practice in writs of sci. fa. allowing two returns of nihil as equivalent to personal service, is recognized and admitted by all the cases, its origin is nowhere
What we have said is sufficient to show the judgment is free from error.
It is scarcely necessary to add, that the statute construed by us in Hayter v. The State, 7 Porter, 156, is quite different from that we have just considered, and the decision there turned on the ground that personal service was expressly provided for.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.