Lyle v. Foreman

Supreme Court of the United States
Lyle v. Foreman, 1 U.S. 480 (1789)
1 Dall. 480; 1 L. Ed. 232; 1789 U.S. LEXIS 242
Shippen

Lyle v. Foreman

Opinion

Shippen, President,

observed, that while a man remained in the State, though avowing an intention to withdraw from it, he must be considered as an inhabitant, and, therefore, not an object of the Foreign Attachment. If an inhabitant clandestinely withdraws, or secretes himself, to avoid his creditors, he becomes liable to the Domestic Attachment. The having once been an inhabitant will not, however, protect a man forever from a ForeignAttachment, where he has notoriously emigrated from the State, and settled elsewhere. But the cafe before the Court, is that of a Foreign Attachment issued at the very time that the Defendant was an inhabitant of the State, which cannot be maintained.

Let the rule be made absolute.

Reference

Full Case Name
Lyle, Admor. Versus Foreman
Cited By
5 cases
Status
Published