DeLeon v. Heller, Hirsch & Co.
DeLeon v. Heller, Hirsch & Co.
Opinion of the Court
The affidavit for attachment in this case is in these words: “That Heller, Hirsch & Company are indebted to
This being, then, process to try the issue of indebtedness against the defendant, it is enough so to name him in the process as to secure appearance, if he see fit to appear in person and answer the declaration when filed, or if he see fit to replevy the property seized, and thus become responsible with his surety for the finding and judgment on the declaration when filed. Therefore our statute makes notice upon him, or his replevy of the property by giving a good surety; sufficient to support, not only a judgment on the declaration and an execution on the judgment to be levied on the property attached, but a general judgment and execution on all his property that can be found. This defendant, then Heller, Hirsch & Co., by putting in this replevy bond in this case, did the equivalent of appearing and announcing ready to plead to the declaration when
It follows that the declaration is the real pleading in the case, and that the answer to it makes the issue of indebtedness and its amount. It is that declaration that describes the persons who compose the firm; and the process against the firm without naming it is sufficient if it brings the firm into court, and it does bring it in if it replevies under our statute law. Code, §3328.
Suppose, under ordinary process against the firm name only, as naked in other respects as is this affidavit, it appears and answers the declaration, would the process be void and the party discharged by dismissing the case? Surely not; because the process has answered its purpose, and the party hás notice and is in court. So here he has the equivalent of notice by replevying the property. Even final process is good against a firm without naming its individual members. Code, §§1899,3576. Shall not the mesne process which brought the partners in suffice ?
Further, “Partners suing or being sued in their firm name, the partnership need not be proved unless denied by the defendant upon oath on plea in abatement filed.” Code, §1898. It would thus seem that they may be sued in their firm name perhaps; even declared upon by that name alone. If so declared upon, and' if the firm answer to the name by which they are sued, surely it would be too late to deny the name and dismiss the suit or plead in abatement.
But the ingenious counsel insists that, as the affidavit does not allege the partnership, nobody is sued and cites Barbour vs. Albany Lodge, No. 24, Free and Accepted Masons, and Albany Chapter, No. 15, Boyal Arch Masons, 73 Ga. 474, as in point. But the distinction is that nobody was named there, no corporation or individual or firm or anything like a firm. In this case, Heller is named, Hirsch is named and company is appended, thereby clearly
In the case of the masons, no man was named — nothing like the name of a man, but evidently an entity which could sue or be sued only as a corporation. It must be remembered, too, that the names of individuals .composing a partnership are not easily procured, and the mode of making men answer for debts when non-resident or absconding or moving off, requires rapidity of motion and action, and the affidavit must be made on the spur of the moment. Such irregularities as the failure to set out individual names — all of them — of a partnership, especially a foreign partnership, and more especially when it replevies the property by the same name used in the affidavit of attachment, should not, in our judgment, defeat and fender void the attachment process.
If the ground of the attachment, as, in this case, the foreign residence outside this State, which goes to the whole merit of the attachment process, was not set out and sworn to clearly, and thus the attachment was illegal and void, then a strict construction would be right and the dismissal would be proper and necessary in law; but this is no such defect, but only an omission of individual names that compose the firm of Heller, Hirsch & Co. And such distinction is taken, we think, in 54th Ga. 680 ; 60th Id. 113 ; Walter vs. Kierstead, 74 Ga. 18, and also in other cases. See also Chambers, Jeffers & Co. vs. Sloan, Hawkins & Co. 19 Ga. 84, and Reynolds vs. Jordan, Id. 436 ; also Thompson vs. Wright, 22 Ga. 607, 613.
Judgment reversed.
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