79 Pa. Super. 99 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
The writ of foreign attachment is a proceeding against property and the thing to be attached must be within the jurisdiction of the court. This is evident from the terms of the writ as prescribed by the statute. The object is to bring the debtor within the jurisdiction to respond to the plaintiff’s demand. The sheriff is directed to return the writ on the return day named therein. If he fail to find any person in whose possession there is property tangible or intangible, of the debtor, there is no attachment and the proceeding falls. It does not avail that someone be garnished who has no visible property or chose in action to which the defendant is entitled for the sheriff is without authority to warn such person, nor is he subject to the process of the court,-for if no property is bound no one can be bound as garnishee. When the sheriff makes return of the writ, its function is accomplished. If property be seized the procedure is carried on in conformity to the statute and the appropriate practice, but if no property be seized, there is neither person nor property within the operation of the court’s process: Penna. R. R. Co. v. Pennock, 51 Pa. 244; Mindlin et al. v. Saxony S. Co. et al., 261 Pa. 354; Glenny v. Boyd, 26 Pa. Superior Ct. 380. This principle is subject to the qualification that actual seizure is only required in the case of tangible assets within the territorial jurisdiction of the court. It does not apply to debts or choses in action. Jurisdiction to levy on such rights by process of garnishment rests on the ability to serve the writ on the debtor of the defendant within the jurisdiction of the court issuing the process, but in such case there must be a debt or a chose in action ón which the attachment will operate through the garnishee. Where there is no debtor of the defendant in the foreign attachment, no chose of action within reach, of the court’s process, there can be no garnishment. Wiener v. American Insurance Co., 224 Pa. 292, goes no further than this — it draws the distinction between tangible and intangible property and shows that
The judgment is affirmed.