(аfter stating the facts). Under the provisions of article 4 of the constitution of the United States, which require that full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the judicial proceedings of’ every other state, it is clear that objеction is well taken to the allegations stated by way of defense to the judgment in suit, unless they present facts tending to impeach the jurisdiction of the court which rendered the judgment, either as to the subject-matter or the person. Of the numerous authorities which strictly uphold the constitutional and statutory requirements in this behalf, it is sufficient to cite Thompson v. Whitman,
1. The first proposition invokes the rule recognized by the judiciary act of 1890, and established by the decisions, — that the judgment can have no force in another state beyond that which is allowed by the law of the judgment forum; that, if not binding upon the defendant personally in Florida, it cannot be given such effect in Wisconsin. Laing v. Rigney,
"Sec. 18. The service of a writ of attachment shаll not operate to dispossess the tenant of any lands or tenements, but such service shall bind the property attached, except against pre-existing liens; but the judgment, in a suit, commenced by attachment, shall be satisfied in the same manner as other judgments obtained at the same term of the court are, or shall be satisfied out of the lands and tenements, goods and chattels, generally, of the defendant in attachment.”
"Sec. 21. The filing of (he declaration and other pleadings in a suit commenced by attachment, shall be governed by the same rules which govern the filing of the declaration and other pleadings in ordinary suits at: law, and judgment shall he rendered therein as in other cases.
"Sеc. 25. In all cases where property shall be attached and not replevied, a notice of the institution of the suit shall be personally served on the defendant, or shall be published for three months in some public newspaрer of the circuit, and if there be no newspaper published in such circuit, then a written advertisement in some public place; and such notice shall require the defendant and all other persons interested to appear and plead to the, declaration filed in such eases; and it shall and may be lawful for the court, upon satisfactory proof of the service of such notice, or of the publication of such notice, and upon thе finding oí a. jury of inquest, to be called for that purpose, to award Their judgment upon such finding, and execution shall issue accordingly.”
‘‘Sec. 27. When any suit shall be commenced by attachment, and tne same on motion be dissolved beforе plea to the action, then, in every such case, the suit shall abate and be dismissed from the court; but if such motion be made after the party defendant has appeared and pleaded to .the action, the attaсhment only shall be dissolved, and the plaintiff may still proceed in said suit, and prosecute his debt or demand to final judgment; but, if the suit be already pending and the attachment he dissolved at any stage of the proceedings, the suit Itself shall abаte and bo dismissed.”
These provisions do not seem to present any radical departure from the features which are common to the statutes of this nature in the several states. They probably intend that a judgment obtained through thе attachment shall not have the effect of a personal judgment, without personal service or appearance, — a proviso which is in most of state statutes of like class; and as held in Pennoyer v. Neff,
2. The second defense is fatally defective in failing to allege any fact upon which to predicate the assumed invalidity of the judgment. It states only the pleader’s conclusion of law, and is therefore de-murrable, as counsel frankly conсedes. The question as to the effect of failure to file the declaration, suggested on the argument, is not open for consideration. The demurrer must be sustained, and it is so ordered; the defendant to have leave to answer over at a time to be fixed.
