
    CHARLESTON.
    Ophelia Hoff v. William Eddy.
    Submitted May 6, 1924.
    Decided May 13, 1924.
    1. Attachment — 'Personal Service on Nonresident Will Not Defeat Allegation of Non-resiclence in Affidavit.
    
    Personal service upon a non-riesident defendant within the state will not defeat the allegation of non-residence in the affidavit for .attachment, (p. 454).
    2. Garnishment — When I-ntervenor’s Evidence Nails to Support Claim to Property in Hands of Garnishee, His Evidence May he Excluded on Motion of Plaintiff.
    
    Where the evidence introduced hy an inteirvenor .in an attachment suit does not tend to support -his claim to the property in the hands of the garnishee, the court may properly exclude .such evidence on motion of plaintiff in the suit. ('P- 454).
    
      3. Same — Intervenor Must Recover on Strength of Own Right.
    
    An. intervenor in a garnishment (proceeding, if he recovers at all, must recover on the strength of his own right, and can not complain that the defendant’s right to the property is not proven, (p. 456).
    Error to Circuit Court, Pleasants County.
    Suit by Ophelia Hoff against William Eddy, in which J. G-. Crist and others intervened. From a judgment for plaintiff, the intervenors.bring error.
    
      Affirmed.
    
    
      G. D. Smith, for plaintiffs in error.
    
      Crcdg & Wells, for defendant in error.
   MillbR, Judge :

Plaintiff instituted this suit'in assumpsit in the circuit court of Pleasants County, and filed her affidavit for attachment, alleging that the defendant was a non-resident of the state, and designated the First National Bank of St. Marys as being indebted to him. The sheriff’s return shows that personal service was had on the defendant in Pleasants County; and the return to the order of attachment shows that service was had on the president of the bank designated as garnishee. When the case was called for trial the defendant failed to appear, and judgment was entered against him for the amount of plaintiff’s claim. On the day the judgment was entered, an order of the court shows that the bank designated as garnishee appeared, by its president, “who had been duly summoned as garnishee in the above styled cause, and thereupon the said W. C. Dotson, president of said bank says for answer to said garnishment proceeding that there is now in the hands of said bank the sum of Two Hundred Sixteen Dollars and fifty-six cents, deposited in an escrow account to be paid to William Eddy on the completion of the drilling of an oil well in the state of Ohio, that being the balance in the said account on the 16th day of May, 1921, at the time the said order of attachment was served upon the said bank, but he is not fully advised as to whom the said funds belong. ’ ’

Later, J. G. Crist, J. E. Helm, and W. E. Laugbner, partners, filed in court tbeir petition, claiming a prior lien and equity on tbe money in tlie bank to tbe credit of defendant. They alleged that they bad a contract with defendant, whereby be was to drill for them an oil well in tbe state of Ohio, and that they bad advanced to him on said contract the sum of $2,350.74 or $348.74 more than the contract price; and prayed that tbeir petition might be filed and the plaintiff required to answer, and an issue be made thereon and tried by a jury, and that tbe money in question in tbe hands of tbe bank be released from tbe attachment and' turned over to them.

By agreement of tbe parties tbe issue made by tbe inter-venors’ petition was tried by tbe court in lieu of a jury. Plaintiff moved tbe court to exclude tbe intervenors’ evidence; and on a later day the intervenors moved to quash tbe attachment, on tbe ground that tbe bank’s answer failed to show that the money in question in its bands was the property of defendant. Tbe court overruled tbe motion to quash, and sustained the motion to exclude the petitioners’ evidence; and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff against tbe garnishee for tbe sum of $216.56. From this judgment tbe intervenors have appealed.

First, it is said that the garnishment proceedings must fall because there was personal service of process on tbe defendant, and that tbe record will show be was not a non-resident of this state when tbe suit was brought. "We find nothing in the record tending to show that defendant was a resident of this state, but on the contrary tbe affidavit for tbe order of attachment recites that be was a non-resident. In Shinn on Attachment .and Garnishment, §103, it is said: “Where one is' in fact a non-resident, his property will be liable in a foreign attachment, notwithstanding the fact that the defendant may be in the state at the time it is sued out. Nor Will the allegation of non-residence be defeated by the fact the defendant is personally served. The effect of such personal service will, of course, be to give the court jurisdiction to enter a general judgment and issue an execution, not only against the property attached but against the defendant and all of his property.”

It is contended by petitioners that the answer of the garni-sb.ee and the evidence introduced failed to show that the $216.56 in the hands of the bank was the money of defendant, but on the contrary established the fact that it belonged to petitioners. All the evidence introduced on the issue made by the intervenors’ petition was the testimony of J. G. Crist and the exhibits filed therewith. From his evidence it appears that defendant contracted to drill an oil well for one P. S. Barry, assignor of petitioners, to a depth of about 1000 feet unless oil should be found at a lesser depth. Barry agreed to pay for the casing used, and to pay two dollars per lineal foot for the drilling of the well. A sufficient sum to pay for the work at the rate stipulated in the contract was to be deposited by Barry in the First National Bank of St. Marys to the credit of defendant, to be paid to him upon the completion of the well, any surplus there might be to be returned to Barry. Crist testified that the defendant completed the well, and that $2,000.00 was deposited in the bank, of which $1,-000.00 was paid to defendant in cash, and $783.44 for easing; which would leave a balance of $216.56 in the bank. According to Crist’s evidence, he and his partners in addition paid out for casing and transportation on the same, $569.30, which he says was an overpayment to defendant of $348.74. The well was drilled .to the depth of 1002 feet, which at two dollars per foot would amount to- $2,004.00. From this evidence, since petitioners were to furnish the casing for the well, it appears that they are still indebted to defendant far in excess of the balance in the bank. It is admitted that the $216.56 is a part of the $2,000.00 deposited in the bank to the credit of defendant, to be paid to him upon the completion of the well; and the testimony of Crist is that he did complete it. By their own evidence the petitioners failed to show any right to the balance remaining in the hands of the garnishee. We are of opinion that the trial court properly excluded the evidence introduced by the intervenors, for it did not in any degree tend to establish their claim to the money attached.

As to the failure of the record to show that the money in the hands of the garnishee was the property of the defendant, petitioners can not complain of that, for “the question is not whether the property belongs to the defendant, but whether it belongs to the claimant, and the claimant if he recover at all must recover on the strength of his own right. ’ ’ Shinn on Attachment, §674.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Affirmed.  