Hodges v. White
Hodges v. White
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff in error was summond as garnishee, to answer whether he was indebted to John P. Booth, against whom, White had obtained a judgment. The garnishee denied that he was indebted to Booth, the defendant in the judgment, or that he had any effects of his in his possession'; but admitted, that before the service of the garnishment, he had hired of George C. Hodges, certain slaves for a term of years, and had executed his notes to him for the hire,as the trustee of Mrs. Booth, the wife of the defendant'in the judgment. The answer further states, that at the time of the hiring, Hodges held the slaves by virtue of a marriage contract between John P. Booth and his wife, entered into before marriage, by which the slaves were conveyed to him for the sole and separate use of Mrs. Booth. A copy of the marriage contract was then produced, and the garnishee admitted that the slaves had been in the possession of Booth after the marriage.
The court, acting under the impression that the marriage contract did not vest the title of the slaves in Hodges, as trustee, for the sole use of Mrs. Booth, rendered judgment against the garnishee.
We think the court erred: No judgment can be rendered against a garnishee on his answer, unless it contain a clear
We decline to express any opinion on the sufficiency of the deed to settle the property on Mrs. Booth, for her separate use, as it is not necessary to the decision of the cause.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.