Under section 5706 of the Civil Code (1910), an attachment affidavit, being an affidavit which is “the foundation of legal proceedings,” is “ amendable to the same extent as ordinary declarations, and with only the restrictions, limitations, and consequences now obtaining in the case of ordinary declarations.” Acts 1887, p. 59; Acts 1889, p. 110. As with ordinary pleadings, since the change of the previous law by these acts, an attachment affidavit is now amendable, “whether in matter of form or of substance, provided there is enough to amend by.” Civil Code, § 5681. Thus, where the affidavit does not swear positively to the ground of attachment, such as the non-residence of the debtor (Civil Code, §§ 5055, 5056), the defect is amendable.
While, under section 5056, an attachment affidavit, if not made by the party seeking the attachment, must be made by “his agent or attorney at law,” and the word “attorney” following might be ambiguous in that it might refer to an attorney in fact, yet an affidavit so signed will be sufficient where amendments to the affidavit and the pleadings show that the affiant was the attorney at law for the plaintiff. Moreover, even if the affiant were his attorney in fact, he would be an “ agent” for the plaintiff within the requirements of the statute.
Section 5057 of the Civil Code with reference to giving bond in attachment proceedings provides that “where the affidavit is made by -the agent or attorney at law of the plaintiff, such agent or attorney at law is . . authorized to sign the name of the principal, who shall also be bound thereby in the same manner as though he signed it himself.” “Where 'it appears only from the affidavit . . that the affiant is agent for the creditor named in the affidavit, the accompanying bond, executed in the name of the creditor per’ the affiant, without any descriptive word as to agency, sufficiently appears to be executed by the agent of the creditor having authority so to do,” under the code section stated. Greene v. Lombard, 33 Ga. App. 518 (3) (
Under the foregoing holdings, the court did not err in allowing the plaintiff’s amendments to the attachment affidavit, and in overruling the motions and objections of the defendant, seeking to-dismiss the proceedings.
Section 5102 of the Civil Code requires that “when the
(a) “As a general rule, the courts of this State have no extraterritorial jurisdiction, and can not make the citizens of foreign States amenable to their process, or conclude them by a judgment in personam, without their consent.” Gordy v. Levison, 157 Ga. 670 (
(b) Nor was the court without jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the attachment, upon the ground that both the individual plaintiff and the individual defendant were residents of Florida, that the cause of action arose out of a contractual transaction consisting of notes secured by a mortgage on Florida land, and was executed and to be performed in Florida, and that neither the transaction nor the cause of action bore any relation to any business done in Georgia. While the rule is otherwise as to proceedings in personam, “the property of a citizen of a foreign State is subject to the jurisdiction of our courts, if within the limits of the State, and may be applied, both at' law and in equity, to the payment of his debts.” Dearing v. Bank of Charleston, 5 Ga. 497 (3, 5), 513 (
(c) For the reasons stated in this division of the opinion, the court did not err in sustaining the demurrers and motions of the plaintiff seeking to strike the special pleas of the defendant which alleged a want of jurisdiction.
Subject to his special pleas, the defendant demurred to the declaration in attachment, upon the grounds, that it “does not allege that the notes were in the bank on the dates they were due,”
While the court properly denied the defendant’s motions, dismissed his pleas, and overruled other grounds of demurrer, upon all other objections and contentions made, the ground of special demurrer just discussed should have been sustained, with a reasonable opportunity to the plaintiff to amend his declaration to remedy the defect stated; otherwise, if the pleading is not so amended, the deficiency relating to the vital question of default, the declaration should be dismissed. In all other respects, the rulings of the court are affirmed.
Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed in part.
