Boyce & Wright v. McCaw
Boyce & Wright v. McCaw
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants are judgment debtors of William R. McCaw, surviving member of the late firm of T. D. McCaw & Co., who, at the time of the institution of this suit, was a non-resident of Virginia. The object of the suit by the plaintiffs, who are the appellants here, was to attach in their own hands the judgment debt due by them as aforesaid, to satisfy a claim which they alleged was due to them by the said firm.
An attachment issued, which was afterwards abated by the decree of the circuit court, and the cause was retained to be decided upon the issues of fact raised by the pleadings.
William R. McCaw answered the bill, and in his answer distinctly denied every material allegation thereof.
No testimony was taken, and the cause coming on to be heard at the following term, the bill was dismissed.
From these two decrees an appeal was applied for and allowed.
It is unnecessary to consider whether there is error in the first decree, abating the attachment. As there was no testimony and nothing in the record to overthrow' the responsive allegations of the answer, or to show cause of action on the part of the appellants, the bill was properly dismissed by the last decree. If, therefore, it were conceded that the court erred in abating the attachment, as the case stood, the appellants have not been prejudiced by the error. It may be that the first decree was riot a decree adjudicating the principles of the cause, from which an appeal was allowable, and that it was necessary to await the final decree before the cause could be removed on appeal into this court; still, as no cause of action was shown, the court
. The decrees are therefore affirmed.
Decebes affirmed.
Reference
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- Attachments.—B & W, under Code 1873, ch. 148, § 11, sued out an attachment in equity against McC on a claim for damages, and filed their bill averring a breach of warranty in a sale of phosphate to them by him, whereby they were damaged, and also alleging the fraud and insolvency of McC. Defendant appeared and demurred to the bill, and moved to abate the attachment. He also answered, denying every material allegation of the bill. Ho testimony was taken. Held : Though the demurrer should be properly overruled, yet, notwithstanding the motion to abate the attachment might not be properly sustainable, the bill, being denied as to all of its material averments, should be dismissed with costs to the defendant.