94 Pa. 160 | Pa. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court,
By the second section of the Act of 29th of March 1819, the stock of a corporation, owned by any individual or body corporate, in his or its own name, was made subject to execution as ordinary goods and chattels. The third section of this same act made provision for the attachment of such stock where it was held in the name of another than the real owner. Under this section, where the plaintiff filed the required affidavit, and entered into a recognisance, with two sufficient sureties, conditioned for the payment of such damages as the court or magistrate might adjudge to the party or parties to whom the stock might, in the end, prove to belong, then and in that case process, in the nature of a foreign attachment, might issue to attach such stock. Then came the Act of 1836, which provided; in like manner, where stock was held in the name of any other than the true owner, for the filing of an affidavit and the giving of approved security, and, by the 33d section, it was further provided, that, upon the filing of such affidavit and recognisance, it should be lawful for the prothonotary to issue process, in the nature of an attachment, against such stock, with a clause of summons, &c. It is obvious, that the security required by both these acts was intended for the protection of the persons, natural or artificial, in whose name or names the stock might be held; in this they were alik'e. But the Act of 1836 differs from the Act of 1819 in this., that by the latter the writ issued as a judicial act: “ It shall and may be lawful for such court, alderman or magistrate, to cause to be issued process in the nature of a foreign attachment;” whilst in the former the act is ministerial: •“ Upon the filing of such an affidavit and recognisance, it shall be lawful for the prothonotary to issue process in the nature
Judgment affirmed.