Humphrey v. Wood
Humphrey v. Wood
Opinion of the Court
The law regulating writs of attachment before-justices of the peace (29 O. L. 203) provides for issuing the writ upon oath “that the debtor absconds to the injury of his creditor,”' or “is not a resident of the county,” which the constable is to-execute where he can find property in the presence of at least two credible witnesses, and with the assistance of two freeholders under oath, inventory the goods attached, have them appraised, and the appraisement signed by them and the constable returned with the-writ, &c. It requires the constable to return the time and manner-of service, and declares that where a writ is so served, it shall bind thqproperty attached.
The twenty-second section of the act (p. 208) provides, that if on the return of the attachment against an absconding debtor, it shall be made appear to the justice there were no goods to attach, or not sufficient, the justice shall certify the proceedings to the next Court of Common Pleas, whereupon an attachment shall be issued by the court and be executed by the plaintiff, on the lands of the-defendant in the county, and the proceedings thereon shall thenceforth be as if the attachment had been originally commenced in the-Court of Common Pleas.
The original attachment in this case was not against an absconding debtor, though it is probable, the parties supposed they were-
The record is full of errors — and the judgments are reversed. The whole proceedings since their removal from the justice are void, ■and before the justice there was no judgment.
[Attachment not to be executed beyond letter of statute; Winchester v. Pierson, 3 W. L. J. 131, 133. Jurisdiction in attachment •certified from justice is original; Breckenridge v. Grace, 3 W. L. M. 639, 641, 643.]
Reference
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- HUMPHREY v. WOOD
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