Notice of Hearing

Public Court Documents
April 19, 1972

Notice of Hearing preview

4 pages

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  • Press Releases, Volume 5. High Court Asked to Review Garnishment Procedures of Merchants and Finance Cos., 1968. 66ca06ae-b892-ee11-be37-6045bddb811f. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/e0118f42-93d8-4799-a06c-376b48c28994/high-court-asked-to-review-garnishment-procedures-of-merchants-and-finance-cos. Accessed August 19, 2025.

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ia }I 
President 

: Hon. Francis E. Rivers 
PRESS RELEASE Diractar-Connsel 

egal efense und Jesk Grespbers 
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. ee DeVere, 
10 Columbus Circle, New York, N.Y. 10019 * JUdson 6-8397 festelleg NIGHT NUMBER 212-749-8487 

FOR RELEASE 
MONDAY 
May 27, 1968 

HIGH COURT ASKED TO REVIEW 
GARNISHMENT PROCEDURES OF 
MERCHANTS & FINANCE COS. 

QUESTION PRESENTED: Can a worker's wages be garnisheed by a merchant 

or finance company before the worker has been 

given a hearing or trial? 

NATIONAL 
IMPLICATIONS: There are an estimated 4,000,000 garnishments a 

year. This suit challenges the garnishment pro- 

cedures in seventeen states. 

WASHINGTON, D.C.---The U.S. Supreme Court was asked today by attorneys 

of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) to consi- 

der for the first time the legality of wage garnishment. 

The case was filed on behalf of a 23-year-old Milwaukee, Wisc. 

woman, Christine Sniadach, who earns $65.00 weekly. Mrs. Sniadach is 

white. 

The company for which she worked withheld $31.59 and continues 

to do so. 

An action for $420.00 had been commenced against her by the 

Family Finance Corporation of Bay View, Wisc., but long before any 

hearing or trial, the finance company forced her employer to with- 

hold half of her wages. 

The Miller Harris Instrument Company, her employer, proceeded 

under a Wisconsin law which provides Mrs. Sniadach with "no right to 

notice and hearing or other procedure for challenging the legality of 

the garnishment," according to the LDF brief. 

An estimated four million persons have their salaries garnisheed 

annually, the lawyers say. 

They add that “between 100,000 and 300,000 American workers are 

fired from their jobs each year as a result of wage garnishment." 

If successful, the suit would affect garnishment procedures in 

17 states. These states are: Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, California, 

Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Oregon, 

Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. 

Mrs. Sniadach, who now resides with her parents, is divorced. 

The finance company claims that she owes it money for a purchase made 

by her former husband. 

=30= 

NOTE: The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is a 

separate and distinct organization from the NAACP. Its correct 

designation is NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., which 

is shortened to LDF. 

as

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