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The Annotated Code of the Public General Laws of Maryland, 1924
Volume 375, Page 290   View pdf image (33K)
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290 ARTICLE 9.

The answers to the interrogatories must cover not only such property as may be
in the garnishee's hands at the time of service of the writ, but also all that comes
into his hands afterwards. Devries v. Buchanan, 10 Md. 210.

A creditor may interrogate a garnishee under this section and sec. 13, and has no
occasion to resort to a court of equity for discovery. Morton v. Grafflin, 68 Md. 545.

See notes to sec. 13.

An. Code, sec. 16. 1904, sec. 16. 1888, sec. 16. 1824, ch. 74, sec. 2. 1888, ch. 507.
16. In all attachments the garnishee may appear in court on the return
day of such attachment, or within four days thereafter, and confess the
amount of goods, chattels or credits in his hands; and if the plaintiff will
not take judgment of condemnation for the amount so acknowledged, but
shall'claim a larger sum, then the garnishee shall be allowed the costs of
suit, and reasonable counsel fees to be fixed by the court, unless on a final
decision the plaintiff shall recover a larger amount than the garnishee
acknowledged as aforesaid; and in all cases where, upon a plea of nulla
bona, judgment shall be entered for the garnishee, the plaintiff, in addition
to the taxed costs of suit, shall be adjudged to pay to the garnishee reason-
able counsel fees to be fixed by the court.

On a plea of "nulla bona," the sole issue is whether the garnishee has funds
liable to garnishment or not. Summers v. Obemdorf, 73 Md. 314; Bartlett v. Wilbur,
53 Md. 485.

No person can be charged as garnishee where his legal relation to the fund is such
that he cannot take advantage of this section. Cockey v. Leister, 12 Md. 131.

An. Code, sec. 17. 1904, sec. 17. 1888, sec. 17. 1831, ch. 321, secs. 1, 2.

17. Any plaintiff in an attachment may have the same laid upon debts
due the defendant upon judgment or decrees rendered or passed by any
of the courts of law or equity in this State, and may have judgment of
condemnation thereof as upon any other debts due said defendant; but an
execution may, on application of any party to the court rendering such
judgment or decree, be issued for enforcing the payment thereof, notwith-
standing the attachment; provided, the money payable on such judgment
or decree be, in the said writ of execution, required to be brought into the
said court, to be by such court preserved or deposited, or invested in stocks,
to abide the event of the proceedings in such attachment.

Parties may agree to pay the money into court without execution; if the judg-
ment creditor insists upon execution, he can have it only in accordance with this
section, and must pay the costs. Fetterhoff v. Sheridan, 94 Md. 454.

An. Code, sec. 18. 1904, sec. 18. 1888, sec. 18. 1832, ch. 307, sec. 1.

18. An attachment may be laid on any interest which the defendant
has or may be entitled to in the stock of any corporation, or in the debt of
any corporation, transferable upon the books of such corporation; and it-
shall be the duty of the sheriff or other officer, in laying said attachment,
to comply with the requirements contained in article 23, title " Corpora-
tions," of this code, in relation thereto.

Certain registered bonds of a foreign corporation held to be attachable, under the
circumstances of the case. This section referred to in construing art. 23, secs. 391 to
401 of the Code of 1904—see notes to art. 23, sec. 80, of the An. Code. De Beam v.
Prince de Beam, 115 Md. 674.

 

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The Annotated Code of the Public General Laws of Maryland, 1924
Volume 375, Page 290   View pdf image (33K)
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