Code of Alabama
Ala. Code § 6-6-464 (2026)
Appeals.
✓ official Alabama Legislature (ALISON) text, current July 2026
An appeal lies to the supreme court or the court of civil appeals, as the case may be, at the instance of the plaintiff, the defendant, the garnishee, or the contestant, or claimant.
(Code 1852, §2555; Code 1867, §2983; Code 1876, §3308; Code 1886, §2990; Code 1896, §2205; Code 1907, §4334; Code 1923, §8085; Code 1940, T. 7, §1029.)
Notes of Decisions
Cited in 3
cases, 1979–2016 · leading case: Robbins v. State ex rel. Priddy, 109 So. 3d 1128 (Ala. Civ. App. 2012).
Robbins v. State ex rel. Priddy, 109 So. 3d 1128 (Ala. Civ. App. 2012). “” Ala.Code 1975, § 6-6-464. The question of appellate jurisdiction under the predecessor to that statute was examined by our supreme court in Steiner Bros.”
Fields v. State Dep't of Human Resources ex rel. Fields, 226 So. 3d 188 (Ala. Civ. App. 2016). “See also § 6-6-464, Ala. Code 1975 (“An appeal [in garnishment proceedings] lies to the supreme court or the court of civil appeals, as the case may be, at the instance of the plaintiff, the defendant, the garnishee, or the contestant, or claimant.”
Boswell v. Alabama Nat'l Bank of Montgomery, 375 So. 2d 260 (Ala. Civ. App. 1979). “The Bank further contends that the authority conferred upon the Department by § 40-2-11(17) allows the Department to issue writs of garnishment without the safeguards set forth in § 6-6 — 450 through § 6-6-464 (pertaining to writs of garnishment issued out of the circuit courts).”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the
Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and
treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.