Camp v. Cahn
Camp v. Cahn
Opinion of the Court
This was an attachment sued out under the provisions of the 3293d section of the Code. The plaintiff made the following affidavit for the purpose of obtaining the attachment:
“ Georgia, Fulton County. — Before me, the subscriber, a notary public in and for said county of Fulton, personally came and appeared AY. II. Camp, who, on oath, deposeth*559 and saith, that Louis Cahn is indebted to him in the sum of $767 65, and that said'indebtedness was created, in part, by the purchase of a one-half interest in the following property by the said Louis Cahn, from the said W. H. Camp, t©-wit: Ten kegs nails at $5 00, $50 00; twelve boxes ink at $1 00, $12 00; twenty-four wash-tubs at $3 00, 72 00; one hod water buckets, $50 00; one hod sugar buckets, $15 00; forty-five boxes tea, five pounds each, at $2 00, $90 00; eighteen boxes soap, at $2 50, $45 00 ; three hundred bar. head, $27 00; one pair trucks, $9 00; one flour scales, $50 00; one iron safe, $140 00 ; one desk and money drawer, $18 00; one bay mare, $115 00; one dray and harness, $112 00; one table, $1 75 ; one office chair and fine state chair, $4 00; one partition, $10 00; one letter press, $3 00; one lot in second ward of the city of Atlanta, Fulton county, on the south side of Jones street, bounded on the west by E. Murphey’s property, thence two hundred and twelve to an alley, thence running east forty-seven feet to J. O’Neal’s line, thence back to Jones’ street two hundred and twelve, thence west along Jones’ street to beginning corner, said lot now being unoccupied, $500 00; and that the debt is now due and unpaid, and that all the foregoing property is in the possession of Louis Cahn. [Signed] W. H. Camp.
“ Sworn to and subscribed before me,
“2d day of May, 1874.
“John T. Glenn, Notary Public.”
On the trial of the case, as it appears from the record, the defendant, having replevied the property on which the attachment had been levied, made a motion to dismiss it, because the amount due for the purchase money of the property attached, was not sufficiently stated in the affidavit as required by the statute, which motion was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted. The plaintiff then proposed to go on with the trial of the case as at common law, having filed his declaration and shown that the defendant had appeared and replevied the property levied on by giving bond
The other question in the ease, is whether the plaintiff in attachment when the property attached has been replevied by the defendant in attachment, is entitled to proceed against him and obtain a judgment, as in other cases at common law, when the attachment has been dismissed, as provided by the 3309th section of the Code. In other words, is the replevying the property attached by the defendant such an appearance and notice of the pendency of the attachment and of the proceedings thereon, as will entitle the plaintiff to proceed against him on the declaration filed, and establish his demand as in other cases at common law, although the attachment may have been dismissed. The 3319th section of the Code provides for replevying the property attached by the defendant’s giving bond, etc. In Reid and wife vs. Moore. 12th Georgia Reports, 368, it was held that giving a replevy bond in an attachment suit, under the act of 1799, was an appearance by defendant. The 3328th section of the Code declares that “when the defendant has given bond and security, as provided in section 3319 of this Code, or when he has appeared and made defense by himself or attorney at law, or when he has been cited to appear, as provided in section 3309 of this Code,
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. H. Camp, in error v. Louis Cahn, in error
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published