23 Conn. 242 | Conn. | 1854
The defendant, in the present ease, is charged with a trespass in taking the plaintiff’s property, which he attached, upon a writ, directed to him, as an indifferent person. The only objection made to the legality of his proceedings is, that he did not make oath to the truth of his endorsement, before judgment in the suit was rendered.
The statute, authorizing the service of writs by an indifferent person, does not require such oath, to render the doings legal. It is not so with respect to the oath required of the plaintiff, as to the necessity for directing a writ to an indifferent person. That oath must be taken, and the magistrate, issuing the writ, must certify upon it that he administered the oath, and unless this is done, the process will not be legal, nor afford any protection to the person serving it.
But the affidavit of an indifferent person, as to the service of the writ, is mere evidence in support of his return, and, when made, places the return upon the same ground, as that made by a sheriff or constable, under his official oath, upon an ordinary writ. The court, to which such a writ is returned, ought to be satisfied by proper evidence, that it has been legally served, before proceeding to render judgment in the suit. And although the oath of the party serving the process is the usual and proper mode of proving the service, yet we know of no law rendering such oath indispensable.
The practice is not so in other cases. Our statutes authorize the superior and county courts, and the judges of those courts, to make orders relative to the notice to be given to defendants, in suits in chancery, and for divorce, residing out of the state. Such notices are frequently given by indifferent persons, and their oaths are not always required to prove the notice. The court may find the fact upon any legal and satisfactory evidence, and this is frequently done.
In the present case, the endorsement of the defendant upon the writ, unsupported by any other evidence, would not, of itself, prove the matters therein set forth. But we do not
For these reasons, we are of opinion that there is no error in the proceedings of the county court, and we so advise the superior court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except Church, C. J., who was absent when the case was argued.
Judgment affirmed.