Baldwin v. Woodbridge & Turner Engineering Co.
Baldwin v. Woodbridge & Turner Engineering Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action in this case is for work, labor and materials furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant, the Woodbridge & Turner Engineering Company, in the construction of the Tonawanda Electric Railroad Company’s railway from Buffalo to the village of Tonawanda. The declaration sets out the contracts under which the work, labor and materials were furnished, and has annexed a bill of particulars.
To the second and third pleas the plaintiff replies that the judgment of record mentioned therein, which is the same in both, in the Circuit Court of Passaic county, was recovered in an action in rem, to wit, an attachment, in which action the plaintiff never received any summons or notice before judgment was entered against him, and never entered an appearance, and that therefore the defendant ought not to be admitted or received to plead as secondly and thirdly pleaded. To this replication the defendant files his demurrer.
This demurrer must be overruled.
The only question is whether the plaintiff is barred by the record of the judgment in the suit in attachment set up in the pleas.
A judgment in attachment against a foreign or absconding debtor can have no other or further effect than to subject to lien the property upon which the attachment is executed, or upon such property as the statute directs a lien shall be created during the continuance of the proceedings. The proceedings are not of a common law nature, but a special remedy given against the rights, credits and effects of the
If no property be inventoried or appraised, no judgment in attachment can be rendered. The proceeding is irn rem and operates only upon the property attached. Neal v. Cook, 5 Halst. 337; Welsh v. Blackwell, 2 Gr. 344; Thompson v. Eastburn, 1 Harr. 100; Tomlinson v. Stiles, 4 Dutcher 201; S. C., 5 Id. 426. The writ now, by statute, is a lien upon all the lands of the defendant, although the officer to whom the writ is directed neglects or refuses to attach the same (Gen. Stat, p. 101, § 19), but it is not a personal action and its force and effect is limited by the statute.
In Miller v. Dungan, 7 Vroom 21, it was established that a judgment obtained in a proceeding by attachment against a non-resident debtor, who does not appear to such action, will not form the foundation for an action. The proceeding is in rem and can have no effect, except with respect to the property which, by the statute, is subjected to its lien. In Miller v. Dungan, the Chief Justice says: “The contention that the judgment is to have the force of one against the person, is not consistent with common justice or with the several provisions of the statute in its general spirit.”
Except with respect to the property attached, the proceeding has no effect. No action can be brought on the judgment recovered, and in an action on the original demand a judgment in attachment is not competent as “prima facie evidence of indebtedness.” Schenck v. Griffin, 9 Vroom 462; Rubber Company v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 807, 810. The defendant has his election to appear to the suit in attachment or bring his action afterwards. Schenck v. Griffin, supra. From these authorities it is clear, upon principle, that the judgment in attachment is entirely inoperative beyond the bounds to which it is made a lien by the statute which authorizes the action.
None of the provisions of the act entitled “An act concerning set-off” (Gen. Stat, p. 3109), can have any application
An objection is made to the replication that it is only a plea of nul iiel record, but it cannot have any force whatever, for it was certainly the right of the plaintiff to reply to these pleas setting up the special character of the record, in order to show that it could have no such force under the statutes as was claimed by the defendant. In an action of debt upon a foreign judgment, the plea that no process of the court in which the judgment was obtained or other legal notice of the pendency of the action was ever served upon the defendant, and that the defendant never appeared or made defence, and that by reason of this the court never obtained jurisdiction to render the judgment, was a well-established procedure.
The demurrer must be overruled, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GEORGE D. BALDWIN v. THE WOODBRIDGE & TURNER ENGINEERING COMPANY
- Status
- Published