Huntington v. Pedersen , 294 Neb. 294 ( 2016 )


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    07/29/2016 09:07 AM CDT
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    HUNTINGTON v. PEDERSEN
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 294
    James Huntington et al., appellants, v.
    Donald H. Pedersen et al., appellees, and
    K.C. Engdahl, garnishee-appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed July 29, 2016.     No. S-14-1134.
    1.	 Garnishment: Appeal and Error. Garnishment is a legal proceeding.
    To the extent factual issues are involved, the findings of a garnishment
    hearing judge have the effect of findings by a jury and, on appeal, will
    not be set aside unless clearly wrong.
    2.	 Statutes: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation is a question of
    law that an appellate court resolves independently of the trial court.
    3.	 Garnishment: Statutes. Garnishment in aid of execution is a legal rem-
    edy unknown at common law and was created by statute.
    4.	 Garnishment: Liability: Service of Process: Time. A garnishee’s
    liability is to be determined as of the time of the service of the summons
    in garnishment.
    5.	 Garnishment: Liability: Proof. In an action to determine the liabil-
    ity of the garnishee, the plaintiff has the burden to establish why the
    garnishee was liable to the defendant at the time notice of garnishment
    was served.
    6.	 Garnishment: Pleadings. The plaintiff is required to frame the issues
    in garnishment proceedings and does so through the application to deter-
    mine liability.
    7.	 Statutes: Appeal and Error. The rules of statutory interpretation require
    an appellate court to give effect to the entire language of a statute, and
    to reconcile different provisions of the statutes so they are consistent,
    harmonious, and sensible.
    8.	 ____: ____. The language of a statute is to be given its plain and ordi-
    nary meaning, and an appellate court will not resort to interpretation
    to ascertain the meaning of statutory words which are plain, direct,
    and unambiguous.
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    9.	 Statutes. A court must attempt to give effect to all parts of a statute,
    and if it can be avoided, no word, clause, or sentence will be rejected as
    superfluous or meaningless.
    10.	 Words and Phrases. As a general rule, the use of the word “shall” is
    considered to indicate a mandatory directive, inconsistent with the idea
    of discretion.
    11.	 Garnishment: Legislature: Intent. The Nebraska Legislature sought to
    protect a garnishee from the often unnecessary and sometimes oppres-
    sive litigation by demanding an expeditious disposition of garnish-
    ment proceedings.
    12.	 Garnishment: Liability: Time. To achieve prompt disposition, the gar-
    nishment statutes have specified a relatively short time for counteraction
    by a judgment creditor or garnishor in the event of any dissatisfaction
    with a garnishee’s disclosure contained in answers to interrogatories,
    namely, a written application filed within 20 days in order to determine
    liability where a garnishee’s answers negate a debt, property, or credit
    due the judgment debtor from the garnishee.
    13.	 Garnishment: Liability. While garnishment affords the plaintiff a
    remedy or means to satisfy a judgment, the garnishment statutes also
    embody a remedy and mechanism for the garnishee to obtain resolution
    of a question concerning the garnishee’s liability to avoid unneces-
    sary litigation.
    14.	 Judgments: Res Judicata. Claim preclusion bars the relitigation of
    a matter that has been directly addressed or necessarily included in a
    former adjudication if (1) the former judgment was rendered by a court
    of competent jurisdiction, (2) the former judgment was a final judgment,
    (3) the former judgment was on the merits, and (4) the same parties or
    their privies were involved in both actions.
    15.	 Res Judicata. Claim preclusion bars relitigation not only of those mat-
    ters actually litigated, but also of those matters which might have been
    litigated in the prior action.
    16.	 ____. Claim preclusion rests on the necessity to terminate litigation
    and on the belief that a person should not be vexed twice for the
    same cause.
    17.	 Garnishment: Pleadings: Liability. In a garnishment proceeding, the
    answers to interrogatories and the application to determine garnishee
    liability are the only pleadings for disposition of the liability issue.
    18.	 ____: ____: ____. Although filed earlier in time, an answer to interroga-
    tories which states that a garnishee has no property, money, or credit
    due and owing to the judgment debtor acts as a denial of all issues
    presented by the application to determine garnishee liability filed by
    the garnishor.
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    HUNTINGTON v. PEDERSEN
    Cite as 
    294 Neb. 294
    Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: J
    Russell Derr, Judge. Affirmed.
    Theodore R. Boecker, Jr., of Boecker Law, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellants.
    K.C. Engdahl, pro se.
    Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Miller-Lerman, Cassel,
    Stacy, and K elch, JJ.
    Miller-Lerman, J.
    NATURE OF CASE
    Judgment creditors James Huntington, Tony C. Clark, and
    Professional Management Midwest, Inc. (collectively the
    appellants) served garnishment interrogatories on the judg-
    ment debtors’ attorney, K.C. Engdahl, on two occasions. On
    both occasions, Engdahl responded that he did not have any
    property belonging to the judgment debtors. The appellants
    did not challenge Engdahl’s answers in the first garnishment
    proceeding; however, they did file an application to deter-
    mine Engdahl’s garnishment liability in response to Engdahl’s
    answers in the second garnishment proceeding. The second
    garnishment proceeding gives rise to this appeal. The district
    court for Douglas County overruled the appellants’ motion to
    determine garnishment liability, based upon its determination
    that when the appellants did not file a motion to determine
    Engdahl’s liability after he responded to the first garnish-
    ment interrogatories, he was released and discharged as to
    the property sought therein and, based on claim preclusion,
    such property could not be sought again by the appellants in
    this second garnishment proceeding. The appellants appeal.
    We affirm.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    The original action underlying this case was brought by the
    appellants against Donald H. Pedersen, Marcee Pedersen, and
    Practice Business Consultants LLC (collectively the debtors)
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    and two other defendants not at issue in this appeal. The
    original litigation between the parties resulted in several judg-
    ments against the debtors in favor of the appellants in excess
    of $2 million. On July 31, 2013, the district court filed an
    amended judgment which specifically set forth the amounts
    owed by the debtors to the appellants.
    On August 23, 2013, Engdahl filed a notice of appeal on
    behalf of the debtors from the July 31 amended judgment,
    and that appeal was filed in the Nebraska Court of Appeals
    as case No. A-13-733. That is not the appeal currently before
    us. The debtors paid Engdahl $15,000 to prosecute the appeal.
    The Court of Appeals issued a show cause order directing the
    parties to demonstrate that “there had been a full disposition
    of all the claims as to all the parties to the action” and, if not,
    to show why the appeal should not be dismissed for lack of
    jurisdiction. The debtors’ appeal was subsequently dismissed
    for lack of jurisdiction.
    After the July 31, 2013, amended judgment in the underlying
    action was filed, the appellants made two failed garnishment
    attempts to collect on the judgments from Engdahl, the debtors’
    attorney. The appellants’ first garnishment attempt occurred
    in 2013. The appellants had issued three “Summons[es] and
    Order[s] of Garnishment in Aid of Execution” of the amended
    judgment, each dated August 29, 2013, as to three debtors.
    The summonses were served on Engdahl as garnishee. On
    September 11, Engdahl filed answers to the interrogatories
    attached to the summonses, in which answers he indicated
    that he did not have any property belonging to the debt-
    ors. The appellants did not file an application to determine
    Engdahl’s garnishment liability following his answers to the
    2013 interrogatories.
    In June 2014, a debtor’s examination was held, at which
    Donald testified. He stated that he had paid Engdahl a flat
    attorney fee in the amount of $15,000 to prosecute the appeal
    of the July 31, 2013, amended judgment. Donald testified
    that he could not remember with specificity the date that he
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    delivered the money orders to Engdahl; however, copies of the
    money orders Donald used to pay Engdahl were dated August
    23, 2013. As noted, also on August 23, Engdahl filed the notice
    of appeal, and it was after that date that Engdahl filed his
    answers, on September 11.
    Following the debtor’s examination, the appellants’ second
    garnishment attempt against Engdahl occurred. On June 30,
    2014, the appellants had issued a summons and order of gar-
    nishment in aid of execution of the July 31, 2013, amended
    judgment with respect to Donald. Engdahl was served on July
    3, 2014. Engdahl’s answers to interrogatories related to the
    second garnishment were signed by Engdahl on July 7 and
    filed with the court on July 9. Engdahl again stated that he was
    not in possession of any property belonging to or owed to the
    debtor Donald.
    On July 18, 2014, the appellants filed a motion to determine
    garnishee liability. In their motion, the appellants stated that
    Engdahl did not earn some or all of the $15,000 attorney fee
    paid to him by the debtors for the appeal in case No. A-13-733
    and that therefore, the money belonged to the debtors. The
    motion further stated that Donald had made a demand upon
    Engdahl for the return of the $15,000 attorney fee, but that
    Engdahl had refused the demand.
    A hearing was conducted. In an order filed November 18,
    2014, the district court determined that the appellants were
    seeking to garnish the $15,000 attorney fee in this second
    garnishment proceeding but that application of Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 25-1030 (Reissue 2008) precluded relief for the appellants.
    Section 25-1030 states in relevant part:
    If the garnishee appears and answers and his or her
    disclosure is not satisfactory to the plaintiff . . . the
    plaintiff may file an application within twenty days for
    determination of the liability of the garnishee. The appli-
    cation may controvert the answer of the garnishee, or
    may allege facts showing the existence of indebtedness
    of the garnishee to the defendant or of the property and
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    credits of the defendant in the hands of the garnishee.
    The answer of the garnishee, if one has been filed, and
    the application for determination of the liability of the
    garnishee shall constitute the pleadings upon which trial
    of the issue of the liability of the garnishee shall be had.
    If the plaintiff fails to file such application within twenty
    days, the garnishee shall be released and discharged.
    The district court found that when Engdahl filed his answers
    to the first garnishment interrogatories in September 2013, he
    was already in possession of the $15,000 attorney fee pay-
    ment. Thus, to the extent that the appellants wanted to chal-
    lenge Engdahl’s interrogatory answers filed September 11,
    2013, stating that he was not in possession of funds of the
    debtors including Donald, § 25-1030 required the filing of
    an application to determine Engdahl’s garnishment liability
    within 20 days of Engdahl’s September 11 answers to the 2013
    interrogatories. The district court stated that because the appel-
    lants did not file an application to determine Engdahl’s liabil-
    ity within 20 days of Engdahl’s answers to the first garnish-
    ment interrogatories, Engdahl stood “released and discharged
    as to those funds.” Because Engdahl had been released and
    discharged as to the attorney fee funds in the first garnishment
    proceeding, the district court concluded that the appellants
    were precluded from collecting those same funds in the second
    garnishment proceeding.
    The appellants appeal the November 18, 2014, order.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    The appellants generally assign, consolidated and restated,
    that the district court erred when it failed to find that Engdahl
    was liable to the appellants for the second garnishment served
    upon him and overruled the appellants’ motion to determine
    Engdahl’s garnishment liability.
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    [1] Garnishment is a legal proceeding. To the extent factual
    issues are involved, the findings of a garnishment hearing
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    judge have the effect of findings by a jury and, on appeal, will
    not be set aside unless clearly wrong. ML Manager v. Jensen,
    
    287 Neb. 171
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 566
    (2014).
    [2] Statutory interpretation is a question of law that an
    appellate court resolves independently of the trial court. In
    re Interest of Isabel P. et al., 
    293 Neb. 62
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 848
    (2016).
    ANALYSIS
    The appellants generally claim that the district court erred
    when it determined that Engdahl was not liable on the sec-
    ond garnishment, which the appellants served on Engdahl in
    2014, and when the court overruled the appellants’ motion
    to determine Engdahl’s liability. The appellants make several
    arguments generally challenging the district court’s reasoning
    to the effect that the appellants’ failure to challenge Engdahl’s
    first answers to interrogatories in 2013 precluded their attempt
    to collect the same funds from Engdahl in this second garnish-
    ment proceeding. As explained below, we find no merit to the
    appellants’ arguments.
    [3] The subject of this appeal arises out of a garnish-
    ment. With respect to garnishment proceedings, we have
    recently stated:
    Garnishment in aid of execution is a legal remedy
    unknown at common law and was created by statute.
    Generally, in cases where a court enters judgment in
    favor of a creditor, the judgment creditor may, as gar-
    nishor, request that the court issue a summons of gar-
    nishment against any person or business owing money
    to the judgment debtor. As garnishee, the person or
    business owing money to the judgment debtor must
    answer written interrogatories furnished by the garnishor
    to establish whether the garnishee holds any property or
    money belonging to or owed to the judgment debtor. The
    garnishee is required to answer within 10 days from the
    date of service. If the garnishor is not satisfied with the
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    interrogatory answers, it has 20 days to file an applica-
    tion for determination of the liability of the garnishee.
    Upon establishing through pleadings and trial that the
    garnishee holds property or credits of the judgment
    debtor, the garnishee must then pay such amounts to the
    court in satisfaction of the garnishor’s judgment against
    the judgment debtor, subject to certain statutory excep-
    tions with regard to wages.
    ML Manager v. 
    Jensen, 287 Neb. at 173-74
    , 842 N.W.2d
    at 570.
    If the garnishee’s answers to the interrogatories are not sat-
    isfactory to the garnishor, § 25-1030 provides the garnishor
    with the opportunity to challenge the garnishee’s answers to
    the interrogatories. Section 25-1030 states, in its entirety:
    If the garnishee appears and answers and his or her
    disclosure is not satisfactory to the plaintiff, or if he
    or she fails to comply with the order of the court, by
    delivering the property and paying the money owing
    into court, or giving the undertaking required in section
    25-1029, the plaintiff may file an application within
    twenty days for determination of the liability of the gar-
    nishee. The application may controvert the answer of the
    garnishee, or may allege facts showing the existence of
    indebtedness of the garnishee to the defendant or of the
    property and credits of the defendant in the hands of the
    garnishee. The answer of the garnishee, if one has been
    filed, and the application for determination of the liabil-
    ity of the garnishee shall constitute the pleadings upon
    which trial of the issue of the liability of the garnishee
    shall be had. If the plaintiff fails to file such applica-
    tion within twenty days, the garnishee shall be released
    and discharged.
    We note, as an initial matter and as explained by the appel-
    lants to this court on appeal in both the first and second gar-
    nishments, the appellants sought to subject to garnishment
    all property or indebtedness which Engdahl may have had or
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    owed to the debtors. Thus, as it relates to the $15,000 attor-
    ney fee, the appellants sought to garnish the same payment of
    attorney fees to Engdahl in both the first and second garnish-
    ment proceedings.
    With respect to the first garnishment, the record contains
    three summonses in aid of execution that were served on
    Engdahl which sought any property or indebtedness owed
    by Engdahl to the debtors. Engdahl filed his answers to the
    interrogatories attached to these summonses on September
    11, 2013, in which answers he stated that he held no prop-
    erty belonging to the debtors; and, as noted, the appellants
    did not file an application to determine Engdahl’s garnish-
    ment liability.
    [4] We have stated that a garnishee’s liability is to be
    determined as of the time of the service of the summons in
    garnishment. Spaghetti Ltd. Partnership v. Wolfe, 
    264 Neb. 365
    , 
    647 N.W.2d 615
    (2002), disapproved on other grounds,
    ML Manager v. Jensen, 
    287 Neb. 171
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 566
    (2014). In its order filed November 18, 2014, from which
    this appeal is taken, the district court found that Donald had
    paid Engdahl $15,000 to represent him in the appeal of the
    underlying case. It is undisputed that Engdahl filed the notice
    of appeal for the underlying case on August 23, 2013, and
    that the appeal was pending at the time the first garnishment
    was filed and Engdahl was served. The court specifically
    found that the $15,000 payment was in Engdahl’s posses-
    sion at the time the first garnishment was served. The district
    court stated: “Engdahl had been paid the [$15,000] funds
    and was in possession of the funds by the time he received
    the first garnishment interrogatory in September, 2013.” To
    the extent factual issues are involved, the findings of a gar-
    nishment hearing judge have the effect of findings by a jury
    and, on appeal, will not be set aside unless clearly wrong.
    ML Manager v. 
    Jensen, supra
    . Upon our review of the record,
    we cannot say that the district court’s finding that Engdahl
    possessed the $15,000 at the time the first garnishment was
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    served was clearly wrong, and therefore, such finding will not
    be set aside. Thus, for purposes of our analysis, we accept the
    district court’s finding that Engdahl had been paid and was in
    possession of the $15,000 attorney fee at the time he filed his
    first answers to interrogatories denying he owed any amount
    to the debtors.
    With respect to the second garnishment, the record contains
    a summons in aid of execution that was served on Engdahl
    seeking any property or indebtedness owed by Engdahl to the
    judgment debtor Donald. Engdahl filed his answers to the sec-
    ond interrogatories on July 9, 2014, again stating that he held
    no property belonging to Donald. Within 20 days of Engdahl’s
    answers to the second interrogatories, the appellants filed their
    motion to determine Engdahl’s garnishment liability. In the
    motion, the appellants alleged that Donald had paid Engdahl a
    $15,000 attorney fee to prosecute the appeal of the underlying
    case, that Engdahl had not earned some or all of the $15,000
    payment, and that thus, the money belonged to Donald and
    Engdahl was liable for that amount.
    [5,6] In their application, the appellants specified that they
    were seeking to garnish the $15,000 attorney fee payment and
    alleged that Engdahl was liable for that amount. In an action
    to determine the liability of the garnishee, the plaintiff has the
    burden to establish why the garnishee was liable to the defend­
    ant at the time notice of garnishment was served. Gerdes v.
    Klindt, 
    253 Neb. 260
    , 
    570 N.W.2d 336
    (1997). The plaintiff
    is required to frame the issues in the garnishment proceed-
    ings and does so through the application to determine liability.
    
    Id. Based on
    the foregoing principles and given the findings
    of the district court, the $15,000 payment sought to be gar-
    nished by the appellants was the subject of both the first and
    second garnishments. In other words, the appellants sought to
    garnish the same property in both the first and second garnish-
    ment proceedings.
    Having established that the appellants sought to garnish the
    same property, specifically the $15,000 payment, in both the
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    first and second garnishment proceedings, we must determine
    what legal effect the first garnishment proceeding had on the
    second garnishment proceeding. In doing so, we apply the
    garnishment statutes, specifically § 25-1030, quoted above.
    We recently clarified the application of the rules of statu-
    tory interpretation to garnishment statutes. In ML Manager v.
    Jensen, 
    287 Neb. 171
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 566
    (2014), we recognized
    that in earlier cases, we had stated that because garnishment
    statutes were in derogation of common law, they were to
    be strictly construed; however, we noted that by stating this
    in our prior cases, we ignored Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2218
    (Reissue 2008), which provides that “[t]he rule of the com-
    mon law that statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly
    construed has no application to this code.” Therefore, we held
    in ML Manager that “[b]ecause the garnishment statutes are
    part of chapter 25, we will view them under our general rules
    of statutory 
    interpretation.” 287 Neb. at 177
    , 842 N.W.2d
    at 572.
    [7-9] Regarding our general rules of statutory interpreta-
    tion, we have stated that the rules of statutory interpretation
    require an appellate court to give effect to the entire lan-
    guage of a statute, and to reconcile different provisions of
    the statutes so they are consistent, harmonious, and sensible.
    Hoppens v. Nebraska Dept. of Motor Vehicles, 
    288 Neb. 857
    ,
    
    852 N.W.2d 331
    (2014). The language of a statute is to be
    given its plain and ordinary meaning, and an appellate court
    will not resort to interpretation to ascertain the meaning of
    statutory words which are plain, direct, and unambiguous.
    In re Estate of Alberts, 
    293 Neb. 1
    , 
    875 N.W.2d 427
    (2016).
    A court must attempt to give effect to all parts of a statute,
    and if it can be avoided, no word, clause, or sentence will
    be rejected as superfluous or meaningless. Village at North
    Platte v. Lincoln Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    292 Neb. 533
    , 
    873 N.W.2d 201
    (2016).
    We apply these rules to § 25-1030. In this case, in response
    to the first garnishment interrogatories, Engdahl stated that
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    he did not have any property belonging to the debtors. Under
    § 25-1030, the appellants had the opportunity to challenge
    Engdahl’s answers to the interrogatories by filing an appli-
    cation to determine garnishee liability within 20 days of
    Engdahl’s answers. Section 25-1030 provides in part that “[i]f
    the garnishee appears and answers and his or her disclosure
    is not satisfactory to the plaintiff . . . the plaintiff may file an
    application within twenty days for determination of the liability
    of the garnishee.”
    [10] However, the appellants failed to file an application
    to determine Engdahl’s garnishment liability within 20 days
    after Engdahl filed his answers to the first interrogatories.
    Section 25-1030 provides that “[i]f the plaintiff fails to file
    such application within twenty days, the garnishee shall be
    released and discharged.” As a general rule, the use of the
    word “shall” is considered to indicate a mandatory directive,
    inconsistent with the idea of discretion. Flores v. Flores-
    Guerrero, 
    290 Neb. 248
    , 
    859 N.W.2d 578
    (2015). In consider-
    ing § 25-1030, we have stated:
    The words release and discharge have relatively popu-
    lar and generally accepted meanings. Release means
    “to relieve from something that confines, burdens,
    or oppresses.” Webster’s Third New International
    Dictionary, Unabridged 1917 (1981). Discharge means
    “to relieve of a charge, load, or burden . . . to free from
    something that burdens . . . release from an obligation.”
    
    Id. at 644.
    NC+ Hybrids v. Growers Seed Assn., 
    228 Neb. 306
    , 310,
    
    422 N.W.2d 542
    , 545 (1988) (NC+ Hybrids II) (emphasis in
    original). Accordingly, under the plain language of § 25-1030,
    if a garnishor fails to file an application to determine the
    garnishee’s liability within 20 days of when the garnishee’s
    answers to interrogatories are filed, the statute “prescribe[s]
    an unequivocal and mandatory conclusion” that the garnishee
    shall be released and discharged. NC+ Hybrids 
    II, 228 Neb. at 312
    , 422 N.W.2d at 546.
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    [11-13] This reading of the plain language of the statute
    is consistent with our previous pronouncements regarding
    § 25-1030. We have previously stated that the statutory lan-
    guage indicates that the purpose of § 25-1030 was to create
    an expedited garnishment proceeding. ML Manager v. Jensen,
    
    287 Neb. 171
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 566
    (2014); NC+ Hybrids v.
    Growers Seed Assn., 
    219 Neb. 296
    , 
    363 N.W.2d 362
    (1985)
    (NC+ Hybrids I), disapproved on other grounds, ML Manager
    v. 
    Jensen, supra
    . As a stranger to the proceedings in which
    a judgment has been obtained, a garnishee is normally an
    innocent third party exposed to inconvenience and hazards or
    expense of extended litigation. 
    Id. The Nebraska
    Legislature
    sought to protect a garnishee from this often unnecessary and
    sometimes oppressive litigation by demanding an expeditious
    disposition of proceedings. 
    Id. To achieve
    prompt disposi-
    tion, the garnishment statutes have specified a relatively short
    time for counteraction by a judgment creditor or garnishor
    in the event of any dissatisfaction with a garnishee’s disclo-
    sure contained in answers to interrogatories, namely, a writ-
    ten application filed within 20 days in order to determine
    liability where a garnishee’s answers negate a debt, property,
    or credit due the judgment debtor from the garnishee. 
    Id. While garnishment
    affords the plaintiff a remedy or means
    to satisfy a judgment, the garnishment statutes also embody
    a remedy and mechanism for the garnishee to obtain reso-
    lution of a question concerning the garnishee’s liability to
    avoid unnecessary litigation. ML Manager v. 
    Jensen, supra
    ;
    NC+ Hybrids II.
    The history of the action reflected in our opinion in
    NC+ Hybrids II is factually similar to the present case. In that
    case, the garnishor failed to challenge the garnishee’s answers
    to initial garnishment interrogatories by filing an application
    to determine the garnishee’s liability within 20 days of the
    garnishee’s initial answers, and accordingly, judgment was
    entered in favor of the garnishee which discharged the gar-
    nishee of liability. We affirmed the order of discharge on
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    appeal. See NC+ Hybrids I. The garnishor filed a subsequent
    garnishment against the garnishee which was directed toward
    the same property that was at issue in the initial garnishment
    proceeding. The garnishee claimed that the initial garnishment
    proceeding had been terminated by discharge of the garnishee
    and that the garnishor’s interrogatories served in the subse-
    quent garnishment proceeding were not valid. The district
    court agreed with the garnishee.
    [14-16] In affirming the district court’s decision in
    NC+ Hybrids II, we looked to the doctrine of res judicata,
    now called claim preclusion. Claim preclusion bars the reliti-
    gation of a matter that has been directly addressed or nec-
    essarily included in a former adjudication if (1) the former
    judgment was rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction,
    (2) the former judgment was a final judgment, (3) the former
    judgment was on the merits, and (4) the same parties or their
    privies were involved in both actions. See Hara v. Reichert,
    
    287 Neb. 577
    , 
    843 N.W.2d 812
    (2014). The doctrine bars
    relitigation not only of those matters actually litigated, but
    also of those matters which might have been litigated in the
    prior action. 
    Id. The doctrine
    rests on the necessity to termi-
    nate litigation and on the belief that a person should not be
    vexed twice for the same cause. 
    Id. In NC+
    Hybrids II, we determined that when a garnishor
    fails to file an application to determine garnishment liability
    in order to challenge the garnishee’s answers to interroga-
    tories, the resulting judgment of discharge of the garnishee
    pursuant to § 25-1030 is a judgment on the merits as an adju-
    dication of the garnishee’s liability. In NC+ Hybrids II, we
    observed that the garnishor’s subsequent garnishment sought
    to garnish the same property or indebtedness as had been
    sought in the initial garnishment and that therefore, “[t]he
    question of [the garnishee’s] liability which was raised in the
    previous garnishment is the same ultimate question raised in
    [the garnishor’s] subsequent garnishment 
    proceeding.” 228 Neb. at 313
    , 422 N.W.2d at 546. We determined that res
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    judicata precluded another determination of the garnishee’s
    liability in the subsequent garnishment proceeding, because
    the garnishee had already obtained a favorable judgment on
    the garnishor’s garnishment claim based on the same property
    or indebtedness.
    In NC+ Hybrids II, we specifically held:
    Adhering to the policy embodied in the doctrine of res
    judicata, we now hold that, when a garnishee answers
    and denies an obligation or indebtedness to the judgment
    debtor, but the plaintiff fails to contest, controvert, or
    traverse such denial by the garnishee, a subsequent judg-
    ment of discharge, as the result of the plaintiff’s failure to
    respond, is a judgment on the merits as an adjudication
    of the garnishee’s liability to the plaintiff for the obliga-
    tion or indebtedness to the judgment debtor which is the
    subject of the garnishment 
    proceeding. 228 Neb. at 312-13
    , 422 N.W.2d at 546. In addition, we noted
    in NC+ Hybrids II that other “[c]ourts have applied the doc-
    trine of res judicata to garnishment proceedings” under similar
    procedural histories. 228 Neb. at 
    312, 422 N.W.2d at 546
    (cit-
    ing cases).
    In the present case, similarly to NC+ Hybrids II, the prop-
    erty the appellants sought to garnish in the first garnishment
    proceeding has been found to be the same as the property
    sought in the second garnishment proceeding, herein spe-
    cifically the $15,000 attorney fee Donald paid to Engdahl. In
    the first garnishment proceeding, when the appellants failed
    to file an application to determine Engdahl’s garnishment
    liability after Engdahl filed his answers to the interrogato-
    ries stating that he had no property belonging to the debtors,
    Engdahl was “released and discharged” pursuant to § 25-1030.
    This discharge was tantamount to a judgment on the mer-
    its as an adjudication of Engdahl’s liability to the appel-
    lants for the obligation or indebtedness of the debtors which
    was the subject of the first garnishment proceeding. See
    NC+ Hybrids II.
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    [17,18] In the second garnishment proceeding, Engdahl
    again stated in his answers to the interrogatories that he held
    no property belonging to the debtor Donald. The appellants
    subsequently filed their motion to determine Engdahl’s gar-
    nishment liability. In a garnishment proceeding, the answers
    to interrogatories and the application to determine garnishee
    liability are the only pleadings for disposition of the lia-
    bility issue. Spaghetti Ltd. Partnership v. Wolfe, 
    264 Neb. 365
    , 
    647 N.W.2d 615
    (2002), disapproved on other grounds,
    ML Manager v. Jensen, 
    287 Neb. 171
    , 
    842 N.W.2d 566
    (2014); Gerdes v. Klindt, 
    253 Neb. 260
    , 
    570 N.W.2d 336
    (1997). See, also, § 25-1030 (stating that “[t]he answer of
    the garnishee, if one has been filed, and the application for
    determination of the liability of the garnishee shall constitute
    the pleadings upon which trial of the issue of the liability of
    the garnishee shall be had”). Although filed earlier in time,
    an answer to interrogatories which states that a garnishee has
    no property, money, or credit due and owing to the judgment
    debtor acts as a denial of all issues presented by the applica-
    tion to determine garnishee liability filed by the garnishor.
    See Gerdes v. 
    Klindt, supra
    . In their motion to determine
    Engdahl’s garnishment liability, the appellants specified that
    they sought to garnish the $15,000 attorney fee payment given
    to Engdahl by Donald. The appellants did not allege another
    or a new basis for claiming that Engdahl held property of one
    of the appellants. The issue framed was limited to the $15,000
    attorney fee.
    Because the first garnishment interrogatories were addressed
    to any property or indebtedness Engdahl owed the appellants
    and Engdahl was found to have been in possession of the
    $15,000 attorney fee at the time summons were served on
    Engdahl in the first garnishment, the unchallenged first gar-
    nishment answers resulted in a judgment on the merits in favor
    of Engdahl as garnishee as to the subject of the first proceed-
    ing. The question of Engdahl’s liability which was raised in
    the first garnishment is the same ultimate question raised in
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    the appellants’ second garnishment proceeding, and therefore,
    the appellants’ motion to determine Engdahl’s garnishment
    liability in connection with the second garnishment proceeding
    was effectively precluded. See NC+ Hybrids II. The district
    court did not err when it overruled the appellants’ motion to
    determine Engdahl’s garnishment liability.
    CONCLUSION
    When the appellants did not file a motion to determine
    Engdahl’s liability after he responded to the first garnishment
    interrogatories, he was released and discharged as to the prop-
    erty sought therein and, based on claim preclusion, such prop-
    erty could not be sought again by the appellants in this second
    garnishment proceeding. The district court did not err when
    it overruled the appellants’ motion to determine Engdahl’s
    garnishment liability in the second garnishment proceeding.
    Accordingly, we affirm.
    A ffirmed.