Brown v. Brown
Brown v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The case is in this court by writ of error, issued at the suit of the defendant.
It is now argued, that the judgment by default is void, because the defendant below had no personal notice of the suit.
It is a general principle, founded in reason and justice, that if a defendant have no notice of the suit, and did not appear, the court has no jurisdiction over his person, and its judgment against him .in such case is merely void. Bridgeway vs. Bank of Tennessee, 11 Humph. R., 523. Burden vs. Fitch, 15 Johns. R., 140. Buchanan vs. Rucker, 9 East, 192. And therefore, the judgment of another State of the union, or of a foreign State, rendered in a case where the defendant was not duly notified to appear, and be subject to the jurisdiction of the court, or founded on the process of attachment, is of no force or effect in this State. Earthman vs. Jones, 2 Yerg. R., 484.
But the process of attachment, authorized by law,
Considered as an original process, the attachment lies against non-residents and persons who in the cases specified, absent themselves, or remove their property from the jmisdiction of the court. Act 1794, ch. 1. 1843, ch. 29.
Thege acts, however, do not aid the present case: The defendant is a local citizen, he does not absent himself or remove his property from the jurisdiction of the court, and may be personally summoned- to mate defence, if any he have, against the plaintiff’s demand.
The present attachment, states no case provided for in our statutes, where it can be considered as an original process to cause the defendant to appear and answer the plaintiff’s suit. It states the case of a mechanic’s lien, and its appropriate function is to enforce the lien, and not the appearance of the defendant.
The lien given to mechanics, “may be enforced by attachment, either at law or in equity:” Act 1846, ch. 118. And in Barnes vs. Thompson, 2 Swan R., 314, it was field, in conformity to the statute, that the attachment was the only remedy to enforce the lien. We think it clear, that the attachment, which secures and enforces the mechanic’s lien, must be considered as auxiliary and collateral to the original process, which compels the appearance of the defendant. He must have a day in court to make his defence, for the matter in contest is the justice of the plaintiff’s demand,
As to the power of the clerk to administer the oath for attachment, it must be considered under the statute, as conferred by implication. •
In the present case, as the court had acquired no jurisdiction of the defendant’s person, its judgment was void. It will therefore be arrested and annulled by the judgment of this court.
Judgment arrested.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William L. Brown v. Brown & McCullough
- Status
- Published