Freitas v. Griffith & Boyd
Freitas v. Griffith & Boyd
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants in error, Griffith and Boyd, execution creditors of J. D. Freitas, the husband of the plaintiff in error, M. J. Freitas, issued a summons against her under
Several assignments of error were pressed in argument, but, in our view of the case, the controlling question involves the power of the circuit court, in a summons on suggestion by an execution creditor of a husband, to set aside an alleged fraudulent transfer of personal property from him to the wife.
Proceedings on suggestion are prescribed by sections 3609 to 3613 of the Code, inclusive, and by the terms of these enactments the court can make no order against the party summoned unless he is found to be either indebted to the execution debtor, or to have estate of such debtor in his possession. In the present case, neither of these conditions were shown to exist. It was not pretended that the garnishee was indebted to the execution debtor, or that she had estate of the defendant in her hands. Indeed, the fact was gravely controverted, whether the property in question had ever belonged to the husband. On the contrary, the wife asserted absolute title to the property, which she maintained had been in her undisputed posession for years, and .used by her on her farm near the city of Norfolk.
In Swann v. Summers, 19 W. Va. 115, the West Virginia court in construing sections of the Code of that State substantially the same as the Virginia statute, held that in a proceeding on suggestion the court could make no order against the garnishee, unless he owes a debt to the defendant in execution, or has in his hands personal estate of such defendant, for which debt or estate the defendant could maintain an action at law. Otherwise, suit would have to be brought under a statute corresponding to section 8614 of the Virginia Code.
In addition to the remedy given by section 3614, it was held, in Hoge v. Turner, 96 Va. 624, 32 S. E. 291, that, “Creditors seeking to avoid a conveyance of personal property from a husband to a wife on the ground of fraud, may either sue in equity to avoid the conveyance and subject the
For these reasons, the judgment under review must be reversed, and this court will enter such judgment as the circuit court ought to have rendered, dismissing the proceeding.
Reversed.
Reference
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- 1. Executions' — Garnishment—For What Garnishee Liable — Title in Garnishee — Fraudulent Transfers from Husband to Wife. — On a summons on suggestion, the court can make no order against the garnishee unless he owes a debt to the defendant in the execution, or has in his hands personal estate of such defendant, for which debt or estate the defendant could maintain an action at law. Personal property fraudulently transferred to a wife by her husband cannot be reached by a summons in garnishment on the wife upon an execution against her husband. The garnishment statute does not contemplate or operate upon estate in the possession of the garnishee to which he has title. Section 3614 of the Code furnishes an efficient remedy, by action at law or suit in equity, for reaching such property; or the execution creditor of the husband may ignore the transfer from the husband to the wife and levy on the property as that of the husband, and, upon proper proceedings had, have it sold, or the title thereto tried.