Graham v. Fitch
Graham v. Fitch
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It appears that Neil F. Graham, the appellant, recovered
Fitch, the executor, summoned as garnishee, appeared and entered a demurrer to the attachment, upon the ground that he, as executor, was not liable to garnishment, and to have judgment of condemnation entered against him, in his character of' executor, in respect of a debt alleged to be due from liis testator to the judgment debtor in the-attachment. The demurrer was overruled, and the executor required to answer the interrogatories as to credits. He denied that he was indebted to Gray, the defendant in the attachment; and he also denied that judgment of condemnation could legally be entered against him as executor of Dedrick, to affect assets in his hands as such executor.
The case was brought to trial, and it was shown in proof that Gray had recovered a judgment against Dedrick, sinee
The defendant garnishee demurred to the evidence, and prayed the court to direct the jury to return their verdict for the defendant garnishee, which prayer was granted and the jury directed accordingly; to which ruling the plaintiff excepted.
The first and principal question in the case is, whether an executor ór administrator of a judgment debtor to the defendant in an attachment which seeks to reach and have condemned goods, chattels and credits for the satisfaction of the debt, is liable to garnishment while the estate is in course of administration and before the assets are ascertained and ready for distribution to creditors.
The attachment was by way of execution on a judgment, and was sued out under Section 7 of the old Maryland act of 1715, Ch. 40. By that section of the act it is provided., that the plaintiff in a judgment may, instead of other execution, “take out an attachment against the goods, chattels and credits of the defendant in the judgment, in the plaintiff’s own hands, or in the hands of any other person or persons whatsoever; which said attachment shall have a clause, commanding the sheriff, etc., ‘to make known to such person in whose hands or possession the said goods, chattels and credits of the défendant shall be attached, that, he be and appear in court at the return of the attachment, to show cause, if any he may have, why the said goods, chattels and credits so attached should not be condemned and execution thereof had and made, as in other cases of recoveries, and judgments in courts of record; ’” and if the party or parties so warned fail to appear, the court “shall and may condemn the said goods, chattels and credits, so
It is very apparent that it is not the intent or purpose of the statute to obtain by judgment of condemnation a mere personal judgment against the garnishee in whose hands the goods, chattels and credits may be found; but the judgment of condemnation, as authorized by the statute, is, in its nature and characteristics, a judgment in rem. It is against the property or thing attached, in the hands of the garnishee. But after judgment of condemnation entered, as to the rights and credits attached and condemned in the hands of the garnishee, the execution goes against the garnishee as upon a judgment in personam.
In the long period of nearly two hundred years since the passage of this statute, and during the whole of which time it has been in constant practical operation, the Maryland reports of cases, decided upon this statute, do not furnish a single instance, that we have been able to find, where it has been even attempted to maintain an attachment, by way of execution, and to obtain judgment of condemnation, against an executor or administrator, to affect and subject to the satisfaction of such judgment, the assets in his hands belonging to the estate represented by him, during the course of the administration and before its completion. This fact alone furnishes a strong argument, at this day, against the right to maintain an attachment in such case. But in the nature of things, a judgment of condemnation and execution thereon, as provided by the
In Pennsylvania the question was very elaborately and ably considered, many years ago, in the case of Shewell v. Keen, 2 Whart. 332. After stating many considerations to show the impropriety of allowing the attachment to be maintained, the court said:
“Another circumstance of weight is, that an executor or administrator is, to a certain extent, an officer of the law, clothed with a trust to be performed under prescribed regu
This reasoning of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania commends itself strongly to our judgment; and in the absence of any binding authority to the contrary we think it should be controlling in this case. There is not, however, an entire absence of authority in this District upon this question. The cases of Patterson v. McLaughlin, 1 Cranch C. C. 352, and Henderson v. Henderson, 5 Cranch C. C. 469, maintain the doctrine of non-liability of executors and administrators to garnishment for debts due from the estates represented by them.
It is very clear that Gray, the judgment creditor of Dedriek, could not have maintained an attachment and procured judgment of condemnation of the goods and chattels of the decéased in the hands of his executor or administrator ; and that being so, it is well settled that an attaching creditor can only obtain the rights and credits of his debtor in the hands of the party garnished by the attachment. The attaching creditor, in the absence of fraud, can stand in no better position nor upon any more advantageous ground than the debtor himself in the attachment can occupy or maintain, as against the executor or administrator of his debtor whose assets are sought to be condemned for the satisfaction of the debt. If the debtor in the attachment has no right to proceed by way of attachment against the executor or administrator of his debtor, the creditor of the debtor in the attachment has no such right. The right of the attaching creditor is not superior to that of his debtor to have condemnation of the rights and credits of the debtor, the defendant in the attachment, in the hands of the executor of the deceased debtor of the latter, to satisfy the attachment debt.
We are of opinion that the court below was entirely right,
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- Attachment; Executors and Administrators. An executor or administrator of a judgment debtor to the defendant in an attachment which seeks to reach and have condemned goods, chattels and credits for the satisfaction of the ' debt, is not liable to garnishment, under the act of Maryland of 1715, Ch. 40, while the estate is in course of administration and before the assets are ascertained and ready for distribution to creditors.