Skip to content
Since 2006, dedicated to Indiana mortgage foreclosure, lien enforcement, title and servicing issues.

Bank Loses 100k After Failing To Appear At Garnishment Hearing To Prove Right Of Set-Off

Lesson. A bank, as a garnishee-defendant, may claim a right to set-off funds on deposit against amounts its customer owes the bank. However, the bank should appear in court and prove its right. Merely asserting set-off in answers to interrogatories could waive the bank’s claim and result in a loss of the funds.

Case cite. Old Plank Trail Community Bank v. Mattcon General Contractors, 137 N.E.3d 308 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019)

Legal issue. Whether Bank preserved its right to a set-off of the amounts owed under a garnishment order.

Vital facts. In December 2018, a judgment in the amount of $162,178.95 was entered against defendant, Burrink, in favor of plaintiff, Mattcon. In January 2019, Mattcon initiated proceedings supplemental and sought the garnishment of Burrink’s deposit accounts at Bank. Bank, as garnishee-defendant, answered Mattcon’s interrogatories and identified two accounts with $97,944.07 on deposit. The answers went on to state “Bank has claimed set-off rights as past loans due to Bank.” However, Bank provided no documents to support the set-off, and Bank did not attend a hearing on the court’s order to appear. The trial court determined that Bank “waived any defenses as to garnished funds” and entered a final order in garnishment that required Bank to turn over the $97,944.07 to Mattcon.

Procedural history. The trial court ruled that Bank waived its right to set-off the garnished funds. Bank appealed.

Key rules. A garnishment proceeding “is a means by which a judgment creditor seeks to reach property of a judgment debtor in the hands of a third person, so that the property may be applied in satisfaction of the judgment.” A judgment creditor “has the initial burden of proving that funds are available for garnishment.” The burden then shifts to the garnishee-defendant to “demonstrate a countervailing interest in the property or assert a defense to the garnishment.”

A depositary bank generally “has the right of set-off after receipt of notice of garnishment.” However, that right of set-off can be waived. Waiver means “the voluntary relinquishment of a known right.” The “silence or failure to act will not constitute waiver unless the holder of the right fails to speak or act when there is a duty to speak or act.”

Holding. The Indiana Court of Appeals, guided by the lofty “abuse of discretion” standard, affirmed the trial court’s final order in garnishment.

Policy/rationale. Bank contended that, even though it did not attend the proceedings supplemental hearing, the interrogatory answers provided adequate notice of the set-off rights and, in turn, permitted Bank to set-off any amounts owed after Bank received notice of the garnishment proceedings. The Court refused to reverse the trial court’s decision related to Bank’s “potential” right to set-off:

[Bank] failed to include or reference any relevant loan documents, payment histories, statements of outstanding balances, or notices of default that would support its claimed set-off rights. Moreover, [Bank] had the duty, knowledge, and opportunity to present and prove the claimed defense to garnishment at the February 8 hearing. It failed to do so, despite the trial court’s order that the claims or defenses were to be presented at the time and place of the hearing.

While the result seems a little harsh, the system is set up to be deferential to the trial court, which conducted the proceedings first-hand. Bank didn’t quite do enough to protect its interests here.

Related postSet-Off Versus Garnishment: Rights To And Priorities In Deposit Accounts
__________
My practice includes representing parties, including judgment creditors and lenders, in post-judgment collection proceedings. If you need assistance with a similar matter, please call me at 317-639-6151 or email me at john.waller@woodenlawyers.com. Also, don’t forget that you can follow me on Twitter @JohnDWaller or on LinkedIn, or you can subscribe to posts via RSS or email as noted on my home page.