| Ark. | Apr 27, 1895

Bunn, C. J.

(after stating the facts.) The only question in this case is as to the effect the failure to give the attachment bond had upon the judgment in attachment in favor of appellee.

In Ford v. Hurd, 4 Smedes & Marshall, 683, the Supreme Court of Mississippi held, on the motion of a garnishee, that, when no bond has been filed, a judgment in attachment was absolutely void. So in the case of Houston v. Belcher, 12 Smedes & Marshall, 514, the same court held, on the motion of a non-resident, that the judgment was void where no bond had been filed. It is to be remarked, however, that in Mississippi they have a statute which expressly declares a judgment void where no attachment bond has been given.

In Kentucky, they have a statute similar to the one in Mississippi, and formerly the strict rule was applied as in Mississippi. Martin v. Thompson, 3 Bibb, 252; Samuel v. Brite, 3 A. K. Marshall, 317. But afterwards the rule was relaxed, and the Supreme Court of Kentucky, in Banta v. Reynolds, 3 B. Monroe, 80, held that the expression in the statute making judgments in such cases void was incautiously inserted therein, and that it could only mean that such judgments were voidable.

In Wagener v. Booker, 31 S. C. 375, the Supreme Court of South Carolina, where the statute is not exactly similar to ours, but rather more strict, held that the failure to file a bond, properly signed by the plaintiff, was jurisdictional error, and, on motion of defendant, the judgment was set aside. And yet in the case of Camberford v. Hall, 3 McCord, 345, the same court said: “It has been repeatedly decided by this court that the garnishee cannot take advantage of any errors or irregularities in the proceedings against the absent debtor. The protection which the law has furnished to the property of the absent debtor is intended for his benefit, and not that of a third person. The bond which the law requires is to shield him from unjust suits; if he, therefore, does not think fit to complain that the bond has not been taken in conformity with the requisitions of the act, why should any other be permitted to do so ? But it is said the act declares the attachment void, if the bond be not taken in double the sum to be attached ; and that, the bond not being so taken, the court is bound, on motion of any one, to set aside the judgment, and dismiss the attachment as a mere nullity. The court is not bound to set aside a judgment on any ground of error or irregularity, as already stated, except at the instance of the defendant. A judgment is not void because it is erroneous. If it be rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, it must remain until arrested or reversed.” (Citing cases.) “The word ‘void,’ when used in a legislative act, on such a subject as the one embraced in this act, is to be understood synonymously with ‘voidable’; that is, it will be declared void on pleading.”- This latter reasoning is in accord with that of the Supreme Court of Kentucky in Banta v. Reynolds, supra.

In Van Loon v. Lyons, 61 N.Y. 22" date_filed="1874-09-05" court="NY" case_name="Van Loon v. . Lyons">61 N. Y. 22, where there was. no attachment bond, an attachment and the judgment founded thereon, were held void because there could be no presumption of jurisdiction in the District Court of New York City in which the judgment was rendered— it being an inferior court.

In O'Farrell v. Stockman, 19 Ohio St. 296, the Supreme Court of Ohio said : “The simple question, therefore, was, whether the attachment was absolutely void for want of an undertaking. The common pleas and district courts held that it was not. In this we see no error. The undertaking is not essential to jurisdiction in attachment. It is designed exclusively for the benefit of the defendant. He may waive it, and the omission to file it is a mere irregularity, of which he alone can take advantage. The effect of the omission is to render the proceedings voidable, but not absolutely void.”

The Ohio statute on the subject is nearly identical with ours. The only case we have been able to find in which a judgment in attachment was set aside for want of an attachment bond at the instance or on the motion of another than the defendant in the attachment proceedings is the case of Ford v. Hurd, 4 Smedes & Marshall, 685, cited above, where the proceedings and judgment were declared void and set aside at the instance of a garnishee, and there appear in that case two special reasons for that: one because the statute in that State expressly so declares all such proceedings and judgments, as has been stated ; and the other, because, as stated by the court in that case, “the attachment, being void for this reason, could not justify a judgment against the garnishee, and it was the duty of the garnishee to see that the law is pursued. This is a duty which he owes to his creditor, but especially to himself, as it would be no bar to a subsequent recovery, if he should permit judgment to go against him on an attachment which was absolutely void.”

In Sannoner v. Jacobson, 47 Ark. 31" date_filed="1885-11-15" court="Ark." case_name="Sannoner v. Jacobson & Co.">47 Ark. 31, this court held that ‘‘a junior attaching creditor may intervene in a prior attachment suit, and there contest his rights with the plaintiff in that suit; but he can not be let in to defend the suit and dispute the grounds of the attachment in lieu of the defendant, nor to defeat the attachment for mere errors or irregularities in the proceedings; but only for imperfections which are unamendable, .and render the proceedings void.” We quote from the syllabus.

Whether the failure to file an attachment bond in this case is a mere irregularity or a jurisdictional error rendering appellee’s judgment in attachment void, it is not necessary to determine in this particular case just in the shape in which it is presented.

The attachment bond is expressly made for the benefit of the defendant (see sec. 328, Sand. & H. Dig.), and it appears from the record that the defendants appeared in the suit of appellee against them. Now, from what has been said, we are of the opinion that the want of a bond was such an error — jurisdictional error, if that is a better expression of it — as that, upon motion of the defendant during the pendency of the proceeding and before judgment, the attachment would necessarily be dissolved; yet that such is a right personal to himself, not to be asserted by one who is in no sense a beneficiary in the bond, if one had been made. In other words, the defendant could and did waive the filing of the bond, in the same manner as he might waive the want of summons or notice to appear; that is to say, jurisdiction of his person in any case.

The judgment is therefore affirmed.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.