Allaire v. Laurel Canyon Mining Co.
Allaire v. Laurel Canyon Mining Co.
Opinion of the Court
(After Stating the Facts as Above.) — The issue joined and tried involved the inquiry whether or not the money paid to the bank by Ruff and Carlson, lessees, as payment of rent on a lease for the occupation of mines belonging to the Laurel Canyon Mining Company, received by the bank and paid to the hank pursuant to instructions of the Laurel Canyon Mining Company, and held by the bank to be distributed to the creditors of the Laurel Canyon Mining Company pro rata, subjected the hank to the garnishment process as one indebted to the defendant mining company while holding such money — $2,077.14—for distribution among the creditors of the defendant mining company.
Of course, the question whether the money in the hank is liable to the garnishment depends upon the inquiry as to whether the hank was holding the money for the defendant as its agent or bailee or other like relation, or whether the bank was holding the money as the trustee of the creditors of the defendant min
Under our statutes (chapter 2, tit. 6, Eev. Stats. Ariz. 1913), and as recognized by the garnishment laws generally, to render a person liable to garnishment, he must have in his possession, belonging to the defendant, property, money, credit or effects, or he must be indebted to the defendant (Smith v. Davis, 1 Wis. 447, 60 Am. Dec. 390), and the Arizona statute, supra, gives recourse to shares of stock owned by the defendant in a corporation served as garnishee.
The plaintiff admitted at the trial, through his attorney, that he received pro rath payment on his judgment debt from the bank, as late as the fourth
It would be assuming inconsistent positions for the plaintiff to accept dividends under the transaction for a time, and then change his mind and attempt to forestall other creditors similarly situated from receiving their dividends and appropriate an entire fund to the payment of his claim to the exclusion of the other creditors, ■ as well as to the hindering and. delaying of the other creditors. Hence, conceding that the transaction was designed to hinder and delay creditors, and for that reason the transaction was liable to be annulled at the suit of a creditor thereby injured, yet neither the plaintiff nor other creditors who accepted a dividend, or other benefits, knowing the same was offered and paid pursuant to the said transaction, can be heard to complain that he has been hindered, delayed or defrauded by that particular agreement, for the reason that such creditor has impliedly become a party to and is benefited by such transaction.
We find no error in the record. The order appealed from is therefore affirmed.
ROSS and BAKER, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MRS. THOMAS ALLAIRE, as Administratrix of the Estate of THOMAS ALLAIRE, Substituted v. LAUREL CANYON MINING COMPANY, a Corporation, and THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF GLOBE, a Corporation, Garnishee
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published