v.
Patt, Garnishee
I. The plaintiff’s action was brought by attachment to recover upon promissory notes and an account, and process of • garnishment was. issued against Patt, who answered, denying indebtedness to the defendant in attachment. Subsequently, at the trial, plaintiff offered certain evidence, to which objections by defendant were sustained by the court. The objections were upon the ground that the petition failed to allege that something was due from the defendant to the plaintiff, and the evidence offered did not correspond with the allegations of the petition. Thereupon the plaintiff had leave to amend the petition, and the cause was continued. Afterwards, during vacation, a confession of judgment made by defendant was filed. It is in the form upon which judgments are authorized by statute to be entered by the clerk in vacation. Such a judgment was accordingly entered before the next term. The confession does not in express language refer to the pending action, but is numbered the same. After judgment by confession, the plaintiff filed, a pleading controverting the answer of the garnishee. To this pleading the garnishee demurred, upon the follow' [*487] ing grounds: “That there is a defect of parties plaintiff and defendant in said controverting answer, to-wit: The plaintiff alleges neither corporate nor partnership power or capacity to sue. Said defendant garnishee was not attached as debtor, or as the possessor of property of E. S. McMullen, nor notified nor garnished to answer as debtor of E. S. McMullen, and did not so answer; but was garnished as the debtor of E. S. McMullen & Co., defendants in said action, No. 2,583, and so answered. (2) That the facts stated do not entitle the plaintiff to the relief demanded. There is no general issue, or general denial of garnishee’s answer as such; but admits the truth of his answer, and sets up insufficient and impertinent matter in avoidance. (3) Plaintiff’s right of action against garnishee is founded on three written instruments, — a lease, a chattel mortgage, and a bill of sale from E. S. McMullen & Co., with J. H. Patt, garnishee, and a judgment against E. S. McMullen alone; copies of which are not set out in the answer, and no reason therein assigned for failure to do so. (4) The answer fails to allege that plaintiff has obtained judgment against the defendants E. S. McMullen & Co., and fails to allege an indebtedness from garnishee to defendants, and fails to allege money or property in possession of garnishee, or under his control, of defendants.”
The demurrer was overruled, but the plaintiff afterwards filed the following amendment to his pleadings, controverting the garnishee’s answer: “That plaintiff is a corporation, .organized and doing business under the laws of the state of Illinois; that E. S. McMullen & Co. and E. S. McMullen are one and the same; that although the firm selling agricultural implements at Crestón, defendants herein, went for a time under the style of E. S. McMullen & Co., it in fact, at all times, at and subsequent to the incurring of the indebtedness sued upon by Henny Buggy Co., consisted of one sole, single person, to-wit, E. S. McMullen, and no other person; that said E. S. McMullen, after the last term of district court, as [*488] such sole and only defendant in the case, confessed judgment upon the claim made by Henny Buggy Co. v. E. S. McMullen & Co., No. 2,583, district court; that judgment was confessed upon the indebtedness of E. S. McMullen, who purchased the goods as E. S. McMullen & Co., pleaded upon in that case; that E. S. McMullen is the only person indebted thereon, and said judgment was voluntarily confessed by E. S. McMullen in the above-named case, Henny Buggy Co. v. E. S. McMullen & Co., No. 2,583, district court, December term, 18S5, to avoid further proceedings and costs in said case, for which said E. S. McMullen would be solely liable.”
YI. Other objections are raised by the assignment of errors. Some of them are not argued, but- merely referred to [*490] in the argument of counsel. We are not required to consider them. Others are disposed of by the views we have .expressed, while some are so trivial, or involve such familiar principles of law, that the discussion of them is not demanded. The findings of fact by the court below cannot be interfered with on the ground that it is not sufficiently supported by the evidence.
The judgment of the district'court is Affirmed.