Boone v. McIntosh
Boone v. McIntosh
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
By the Code of 1880, § 2423, authority is given to an officer, having in his hands for service a writ of attachment, “ to seize the books of account and other evidences of indebtedness belonging to the defendant, and to summon, as garnishees, all persons thereby appearing to be indebted to the defendant, and to levy on the stock, share, or interest which the defendant may have or own in any partnership or incorporated company; and all property, debts, and choses in action attached shall be bound by such attachment from the date of the service thereof.”
Section 2424 provides how levies shall be made, and is as follows : “ Every writ of attachment shall be executed in the following manner, that is to say, in case of a levy on the rights,
On the 22d day of January, 1884, the appellee sued out her writ of attachment against the Okolona Savings Bank, and on the same day the sheriff levied the same on various property of the defendant and on the books of account, choses in action, etc., by taking the same into his possession. Among other choses in action thus seized was a note executed by one Samuel Minute, which was in a portfolio that was seized by the officer. On the 24th of January the appellant also sued out her writ of attachment against said bank, and her writ was also levied on the same property that had been attached at the suit of the appellee. The appellant furnished to the officer a list of names of persons whom she desired to be summoned as garnishees, and among them was the name of Minute. On the 24th 'of January the officer summoned Minute as garnishee under the writ of the appellant, and on the 28th he also summoned him under the writ of appellee. Judgments having been rendered in favor of appellant and appellee against the bank, the money due by the garnishee was paid into court, and the question raised is as to its appropriation.
"VVe are of opinion that the money should have been applied to the judgment in favor of the appellant. The seizure by the officer of the books of account and the choses in action does not, under the statute, create a lien in favor of the person under whose writ they are taken. The object of the statute in directing the seizure of the choses in action and books is in order that by an examination of them information may be derived by the creditor touching the estate of the defendant, and the evidences of debt, such as promissory notes, etc., are required to be taken in order that the defendant may be thereby deprived of an opportunity of disposing of them to third persons. It is, however, only by the service of notice upon the garnishee that a lien is acquired by the attaching creditor, for
The judgment is reversed and judgment directed to be entered here.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.