1 N.C. 157 | N.C. | 1801
The first question that arises in this case, is, whether a writ of error will lie for the plaintiff in error, who is a garnishee, to reverse a judgment obtained against himself.—Whenever a new jurisdiction is erected by act of Assembly, and the court that exercises this jurisdiction acts as a court of record, according to the course of the common law, a writ of error lies on its judgment; but when it acts in a summary manner, or in a new course different from the common law, and in a manner peculiar to itself.
The writ of error in England is acknowledged to be a writ of right; and is so in my opinion in this country, on the plaintiff in error complying with the requisites called for by the act of Assembly ; and the court have no right to decide on the errors assigned, till the record is before them, which cannot be till certified by the return of the writ. In Eng-land the writ of error is returned into court before the errors are assigned—upon alignment of errors, the plaintiff prays a scire facias ad audi-
The garnishee is party to the judgment, be-cause immediately affected; it binds his property, which may be immediately taken in execution in consequence of it.
The cafe in Bac. Abr. title error B. page 198, is not warranted by Broke’s Abr. 187, to which it refers. In Bro. Abr. 286, C. “ it is said by " some, the garnishee in London, upon foreign " attachment on the custom, may have a writ of " error, and the plaintiff in attachment in ano- " ther’s hands may; for the judgment is not on- " ly against the garnishee, but the defendant also, " that the other shall be discharged against him, “ which is the extinguishment of the debt of the " defendant against the garnishee;" and cites the year-book 22d. Ed. IV. 31.—This is all I can find in Broke applicable to the subject; and it serves to shew that the garnishee has always been considered a party to the judgment, and for that was entitled to a writ of error.
I am not acquainted with the manner of proceeding on foreign attachments in London, nor do I consider it material to be known, as our attachment is not founded on that custom, nor in