DeArman v. Massey

44 So. 688 | Ala. | 1907

McCLELLAN, J.

This is an action sounding in damages for an alleged assault and battery committed by appellant on appellee. It was begun by attachment, upon the ground that defendant was an absconder, and there was no personal service had on the defendant. Failing to appear, judgment by default was entered, and ou writ of inquiry the jury assessed the damages at $2,200. Upon this finding the court rendered a personal judgment against the defendant for said sum and also condemned to sale the real estate levied on. It is, of course, fundamental that, without jurisdiction of the person obtained, a personal judgment against a defendant cannot be val-*641icily rendered. To secure such jurisdiction the rule was,prior to Bank v. Clement, 109 Ala. 270, 19 South. 814, that notice implied in the levy, and service of notice in the manner prescribed of the levy, though such notice Avas not personally served on the defendant, availed to bring the defendant Avithin the laAvful powers of the court. This rule proceeded on the idea that the proceeding in attachment or garnishment was by nature in personam. Whatever may have been the wisdom and soundness of such a rule, long enforced by the courts of this state, the theory of attachments, in keeping with Avhiqh the mentioned rule obtained, was entirely changed Avhen the Supreme Court of the United States, in a cause; in which a nonresident was the party defendant, declared a proceeding in attachment or garnishment to be in rein,- and not in personam. Accordingly, in Bank v. Clement, supra, this court yielding a proper influence to the announcement of the Supreme Court of the United States in a cause in which that court had superior and controlling jurisdiction, because of the nonresidence of a party therein, accepted the principle, and applied it in that case, viz., that Avitliout personal service a judgment in personam against a merely constructively served defendant or garnishee could not be validly rendered, but that the proceeding in attachment or garnishment being, in the absence of personal service, in rem, the power of the court in the given cause Avas strictly limited to the enforcement of the pressed demand by the subjection, if so entitled, of the property levied on to the satisfaction of the demand.

So Ave are not confronted Avith the alternative Avhether the rule established to the behoof of nonresidents shall be denied or applied to residents who are not personally served, but whose property is under the ban of process in *642attachment or garnishment in the courts of this state. The character of proceedings, attachment or garnishment, being fixed in rem, and not in personam, we think that the principle stated compels the conclusion that no jurisdiction to render a personal judgment can be validly acquired unless the.service is personaLamd-aefcaal. rather than simply constructive. If any other view was entertained, an incongruous situation would result, to say nothing of the, ignoring of the principle upon which the rule as to nonresidents is rested by the Supreme Court of the United States. To cling to the earlier rule followed in this state would extend to the nonresident an exception which our own courts would deny to our own citizens. Independent of the principle and its consequent rule, common fairness, if its recognition imparts no other principle, demands that we make no insidious distinction against citizens of this state. It would be the creation of an insufferable anomaly to hold that in one class of cases such proceedings were in rem, and in another in personam. And it may be here generally observed that where, in attachment or garnishment proceedings, no personal service was had, the trial court should, in accordance with its practices, ascertain the damages or debt to which the plaintiff is entitled, and then render a judgment only in condemnation of the property subject to be sold, the proceeds thereof to be applied to the satisfaction pro tanto of the ascertained debt or damages. Care should be taken to avoid the ren" dition of a personal judgment in the premises. — Bank v. Clement, supra.

There having been no personal service on the appellant, defendant below, the judgment was erroneously rendered, and so it must be reversed, and the cause remanded.

*643Reversed and remanded.

■Tyson, C. J., and Dowdell and Anderson, JJ., concur.
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