Queen v. Griffith
Supreme Court of Iowa
Queen v. Griffith, 4 Greene 113 (Iowa 1853)
Greene
Queen v. Griffith
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Petition filed by Griffith & Co., against Mary A. Queen, for goods purchased by her in the name of Mary Breckbill. The petition Was sworn to, and a writ of attachment issued. To this petition a demurrer was filed and sustained by the court. The plaintiff had
We think the attachment should have been dismissed for two reasons:
1. Neither the original nor the amended petition asked for an attachment. This extraordinary and stringent writ should not be issued unless especially asked for in the petition. This is clearly contemplated by the Code, § 1841: “ The petition which asks an attachment must be sworn to.”
2. The amended petition was not sworn to. Material amendments were made to the original petition. Under these amendments it became a different petition, with additional averments ; consequently the new petition, or petition as amended, should have been sworn to.. But as the proceedings relative to the attachment are independent of the ordinary proceedings on the merits, the judgment will be reversed so far as to set aside the attachment proceedings.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Status
- Published