Walden v. Valiant
Walden v. Valiant
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of assumpsit, brought by Valiant against William Victor, John Hardin and Wm. Smith, in which the appellant, Walden, was summoned as a garnishee. The proceedings were discontinued as to Hardin and Smith, and a final judgment was rendered against Victor alone. At a term subsequent to the rendition of the judgment, a judgment was rendered against the garnishee, on his interrogatories filed in the causd. So much of the answer of the garnishee as raises the question in the cause, is as follows: “On or about the 25th day of November, A. D:., 1846, this garnishee attended a public auction of goods, vfares and merchandize, in the town of Westdsn, in Platte county, Missouri, which goods, wares and merchandize this, garnishee understood1 belonged or had belonged to the said William G. Victor, and were sold by the said defendants, John R. Hardin and William Smith. This garnishee purchased at said auction, goods, wares and merchandize to tjip amount and value of $4 76 for which this garnishee executed and delivered to the said John R. Hardin his negotiable promissory note, pay¿ t'bla twelve months after the date; Said note being dated November 25th» 1S46, hnd bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent, per anuum froto due till paid. And this garnishee further states that on the 4th January, 1846, the said John R. Hardin transferred and assigned said promissory note to William B. Almond, and then and there delivered to said Wm.
This garnishee further states that said Hardin and Smith made the cale of said Victor’s goods and chattels, as aforesaid, by virtue of and under an instrument of writing, executed by the said Victor to the said Hardin, on or about the 10th day of November, A. D., 1846, authorizing said Hardin and the defendant, William Smith, to sell and dispose of the same; to pay them their fees as his attorneys, and to pay over the residue, if any, to the wife and family of the said Victor as he is informed and believes.”
“And this garnishee further states, that he is informed and believes, that said Hardin assigned said note to said Almond for services as an attorney performed by the said Almond for the said Victor, prior to said auctiop, under an agreement to that effect made between the said Almond and Hardin and Smith, and also another agreement between the said Hardin and Smith and Victor — both of said agreements having been made prior to said auction, and that said promissory note was paid to the said Almond for said services under the agreements before alluded to, and this garnishee, from his best information, knowledge and belief, believes that said note now legally and equitably belongs to the said William B. Almond.
There was no replication to, nor denial of the answe^.
By an agreement between the parties, the correctness of the judgment below on this answer is the only point in the cause to l?e considered.
It is obvious that the legal title to the note was never in Victor» Hardin held it as trustee, and the inquiry is, whose equity first attache^, Almond’s or Valiant’s? The solution of this question will depend Upon tiie weight to be given to the answer of the garnishee.
The garnishee stands indifferent betweeiTthe parties. He admits his indebtedness and it is a matter of no concern to him to whom he discharges it. Not having a personal knowledge of the fapt, to whom tho debt belongs, he, from information, asserts hi3 belief, that by an agreement long anterior to the garnishment, the proceeds of the note were to beépplied to the payment of a debt due William B. Almond, for whose -benefit it is obvious this defence is made. The answer not being denied, and being submitted as evidence to the court, warranted a different judgment from that pronounced in the cause. The judgment should & reversed and the other judges- concurring it is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WALDEN v. VALIANT
- Status
- Published