President of the Bank of South Carolina v. Simpson
President of the Bank of South Carolina v. Simpson
Opinion of the Court
Curia, per
There seems to be no doubt that the writ was left at the defendant’s residence, in the manner prescribed by the Act of 1737; that is, it was put in an obvious part of the house, by the deputy sheriff, with a notice to a white man residing'there in the absence of the defendant, but not present at the time that it had been so left; and it is equally certain that the defendant got possession of the writ before court, and when he had an opportunity to enter his appearance. The question arises on the construction of the Act of 1720, whether the defendant falls within that description of persons who may be served with process in their absence, by having a copy left at their residence. That Act provides, “ that in case the defendant absconds, or absents himself so that he cannot be found, the sheriff may serve him by leaving a true copy of such writ at the dwelling house, or the most usual and notorious place of the residence-or habitation of the defendant, with a proviso that the Act shall not be construed or extended to any persons gone off from this settlement, and not being actually resideht in-, the same when such copy shall be left,” Ac. The proviso shews that all persons retaining residences in the State are liable to the provisions of the Act. Neither the duration or place of absence isli-mitted or designated, nor could they well be. It has, however, been repeatedly decided, that the fact of a defendant being out of the limits of the State, at the time of such service, will not be sufficient to set it aside. In the case of Frean ads. Crookshank, 3 McCord, 85, the defendant was in New York'at the time the. copy was left; and in another case, 1 McCord, 566, the defendant was in Georgia. Yet in both these cases the service was held good; and if it had appeared that the defendants did not receive the copy until after return-day, the case before the court could not be distinguished from them. That was a circumstance which
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.