Williams v. Link
Williams v. Link
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The “laborer” whose wages to the amount of one hundred dollars are exempt from garnishment by § 1244 of the code is “ one who subsists by physical toil in distinction from one who subsists by professional skill.” Where physical toil is the main ingredient of services rendered, although directed and made more
Reversed, and judgment here discharging the garnishees with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- T. P. Williams v. N. D. Link, Administrator
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. “Laboree.” Meaning of in % 1244, Code of 1880. Wages exempted. The “laborer,” whose wages to the amount of one hundred dollars are exempt from garnishment by $ 1244, Code of 1880, is one who subsists by physical toil in distinction from one who subsists by professional skill. Where physical toil is the main ingredient of services rendered, although directed and made more valuable by skill, the person performing it is a laborer within the meaning of the statute. 2. “LABORER.” Exemption of clerMs wages. Section 1244, Code of 1880, applied. The wages of a laborer engaged, as a clerk in a mercantile store, to the amount of one hundred dollars, are exempt from garnishment by virtue of the provision of $ 1244, Code of 1880, exempting a laborer’s wages to that extent.