Judah Callender & Co. v. Duncan
Judah Callender & Co. v. Duncan
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
We concur with the presiding Judge, that after a plea to the merits of the action, it was too late for the defendant to object that he was not properly in Court.
The proceeding in attachment is in the first instance entirely a proceeding in rem. The defendant may, if he choose, put in special bail and dissolve the attachment, and thus make it exclusively a proceeding in personam,. If the defendant proposes to aPPeai' and plead without putting in special bail, the plaintiff may object to his doing so, and upon the objection being made, it would be irresistible. Acock v. Linn & Lansdown, Harp.
In the case of Grey ads. Young, Harp. 40. it is said, “ the writ of attachment, although a sort of proceeding in rem, like any other original writ, is intended to bring the defendant into Court; and if he does appear and plead to the merits, like every other, it is functus officio. Its peculiar character is lost, and from thence the proceeding is merely personal, and must be governed by the same rules. The defendant did appear and plead, and according to the rule, all objections to the regularity of the writ were waived, and cannot now avail the defendant.”
If the defendant had not appeared and pleaded; upon the verdict of the jury ascertaining that the property attached was not the property of the defendant, the proceedings by attachment would necessarily have been at an end. But after plea to the action commenced by the attachment, it was as to further proceedings to be had in it, perfectly immaterial whether the property attached did, or did not, belong to the defendant. The plea made the proceeding a proceeding in personam as to the party defendant. The effect of the plea was to put the plaintiff in the first instance to proof of his debt, and to preclude the defendant from the privilege of coming in at any time within two years after the recovery of judgment, and disproving the plaintiff’s debt. Regularly, the issue between the plaintiff and the defendant should have been tried before that between the plaintiff and a stranger claiming the property attached. If the plaintiff fails to recover against the defendant, this is of course an end of both issues. If however, he succeeds, then the question of property still remains to be tried. If this, course had been pursued on this occasion, the defendant would have been heard
The motion to reverse the Circuit decision is refused.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.