165 Va. 259 | Va. | 1935
delivered the opinion of the court.
A writ of error was allowed from an order entered in an attachment proceeding by the Circuit Court of Fauquier county on the sixth day of October, 1933, by which order a judgment for the sum of $25,000 with interest and costs was adjudged to be a lien on certain land of one Harrison Nesbit, deceased, the plaintiff in error having qualified as administrator cum testamento annexo of said estate.
The record shows that the Franklin Savings and Trust Company, Incorporated, a Pennsylvania corporation, filed its petition for an attachment on July 31,1931, against the
Several assignments of error are made to the rulings of the trial court, the first of which deals with the overruling of the motion of the administrator of Harrison Nesbit to quash the attachment. Various grounds were assigned as the basis of this motion, but that most seriously urged in this court is the failure of the petitioner in the original petition to make the parties in possession of the real estate sought to be attached parties) defendant to said petition as required by section 6383 of the Code of Virginia, 1930, and for this reason it is contended that no valid attachment could issue.
Prior to the Code of 1919, by numerous decisions of this court, it was held that the remedy under the attachment laws, being in derogation of the common law, solely a creature of the statute, harsh and extraordinary in its operation, can only be sustained when the requirements of the statute, strictly construed, have been complied with. Taylor v. Sutherlin-Meade Tobacco Co., 107 Va. 787, 60 S. E. 132, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1135; Damron & Kelly v. Citizens’ National Bank, 112 Va. 544, 72 S. E. 153; McAllister v. Guggenheimer, 91 Va. 317, 21 S. E. 475.
Many changes were made in the attachment laws of this State by the revisors of the Code in 1919. The object of these changes was to simplify and clarify the procedure in such proceedings, to make the law more workable, and to permit amendments in the interest of substantial justice between the parties. Burks’ Address, 5 Va. Law Reg. (N. S.) 133.
Regardless of the great measure of simplification of
Section 6383 of the Code of 1930 provides in part as follows: “The person or persons against whom the plaintiff is asserting the claim shall be made defendant or defendants to said petition and shall be known as the principal defendant. There shall also be made defendants any person indebted to or having in his possession property, real or personal, belonging to a principal defendant which is sought to he attached * * *.”
The requirements of this statute are plain and unambiguous, and until it appears that its mandatory provisions have been met the court is without jurisdiction to exercise any power over the property sought to be attached.
In the recent case of Winfree v. Mann, 154 Va. 683, 153 S. E. 837, 839, the court said: “An attachment is purely a statutory remedy. The jurisdiction thereof is a special and limited jurisdiction; and a court, even of general jurisdiction, cannot proceed by attachment unless the power rests upon express statutory authority. In order that a court may have jurisdiction to issue any particular attachment it is not enough that it be a court upon which the statute has conferred the power to use the process of attachment; but, conceding its power to use the process of attachment, the court must have before it a case in which the use of such process is authorized by the statute.’’
It is equally as true that the court must acquire
We are of the opinion that the failure to make the persons in possession of the real estate sought to be attached, parties to the petition for attachment as prescribed by section 6383 of the Code of 1930, is a substantial defect in the proceeding, and no lien was acquired under the writ issued pursuant thereto.
In reaching our conclusion we have not been unmindful of the provisions of Code, section 6409, and the liberality indulged and permitted in attachment proceedings by amendment, since the revision of 1919. We have carefully considered the language of that section and particularly the concluding sentence, which is that “No attachment shall be quashed or dismissed for mere formal defects.” We do not think however, that the General Assembly, by the provisions of section 6409, intended to wipe away and destroy the mandatory procedural requirements of section 6383. If it had been the legislative intent to abrogate the requirements of section 6383 and especially the requirement that a party in possession of real estate must be made a party defendant, then surely it would have done so by some express language free from doubt as to itisi meaning.
There are other assignments of error having to do with certain irregularities of the attachment procedure in this case, but it will serve no good purpose to discuss them in view of the opinion herein expressed.
For the foregoing reasons, we are of the opinion that the order of the lower court should be reversed and this proceeding dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.