Yongue v. Linton
Yongue v. Linton
Opinion of the Court
The sixth section of the attachment Act provides that “ in case the absent debtor or defendant, whose money, &c. shall he attached in the hands of any person, he really and truly indebted to the person in whose hands the money, &c. are attached, then such person, if his possession of the moneys, &c. was obtained legally and bona fide, without any tortious act, shall be first allowed his own debt, he forthwith filing his declaration and in every other respect proceeding as if he were plaintiff in the attachment.” The Act of 1844, 11 Stat. 290, directs the sheriff, when he serves the writ of attachment, to take into his custody the attached effects, unless the party in possession gives bond for the production of them, or unless he claims, on oath, to be a creditor.
It is unnecessary to determine the question, whether Henry Linton, by his surrender of the attached property to the sheriff, without making any claim, as creditor, has lost any lien which he might have had under the Act. The first enquiry must be, was Henry Linton a creditor of John Linton, at the time the plaintiff’s writ of attachment was served on him; and if not, can he claim to be preferred to the plaintiff, an attaching creditor, in the payment of his demand from the property which was attached in his hands ?
The Act provides that if the absent debtor, whose money, &c. shall be attached in the hands of any person, be “really and truly indebted” to the person in whose hands, the money, &c. are attached. With respect to time, it is plain that the absent debtor must be indebted to the garnishee at the time when the moneys, &c. are attached. If future indebtedness were preferred in payment from the effects in the possession of the garnishee, he might exhaust the effects by buying up the debts of others. At the time the plaintiff’s attachment was served on Henry Linton, he was surety for John Linton in a recognizance. A scire facias on the recognizance had been served on Henry Linton, returnable to the Spring term, 1850. On the fourth of March Henry Linton paid the recognizance, and on the fifth,
In Mitchell & Co. vs. Byrne,
The motion is dismissed.
Motion dismissed’.
Ante p. 171.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.