Wallace v. Scholl
Wallace v. Scholl
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This action of assumpsit was commenced April 22, 1897, by a writ of foreign attachment returnable the second Monday of May, which was duly served on one garnishee April 23, and on another May 1, 1897. Judgment was entered against the defendant September 20, 1897, for want of an appearance and answer. On application, the same day, the court granted a rule to show cause why the attachment should not be quashed and the judgment opened and set aside. On November 29 the rule was discharged. There are six terms of court each year, commencing the second Mondays of January, March, May, July, September and November, and this action was brought to the May term.
It was contended here, on two grounds, that the court erred in discharging the rule: First, that the judgment was prematurely entered, and second, that the writ should have been quashed because no bail was inserted in the praecipe or indorsed on the writ or the record. By the 53d section of the act of 1836, it is provided that “ it shall be lawful for the plaintiff at and after the third term of court after the execution of the writ, if he shall have filed his declaration, to take judgment against the defendant for default of appearance, unless the attachment before that time be dissolved.” This was afterward modified as to the time of filing the declaration, but the modification does not affect the present case. In support of the first ground of complaint it is argued that “ the writ was not fully executed until the return was made on the return day: .... that in contemplation of law the return day is the time of the execution of the writ,” and, therefore, the defendant
The other objection raised “that no bail was inserted in the praecipe or indorsed on the writ or the record,” is sufficiently disposed of in the opinion of the learned court below, discharging the rule: “ Conceding that this omission is a departure from the almost universal practice, we cannot see how the defendant has been prejudiced by it. It did not deprive the defendant of the privilege of entering bail in such sum as the court or judge might name, and it is safe to say that this sum would not exceed the sum named, by at least a malicious plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.