12 R.I. 119 | R.I. | 1878
The only service in this case which is relied upon is a service by foreign attachment upon the plaintiffs themselves. The defendants, who are non-residents, appear, not to answer the action, but simply to move its dismissal for want of legal service. The only question now before us is, therefore, whether such a service is valid.
We think such a service is invalid; for, though our statute nowhere expressly provides that the plaintiff shall not be the garnishee, it contains provisions which are inconsistent with it. For instance, it provides that the plaintiff may sue the garnishee. It provides also that the garnishee may defend the suit in which he is garnished in the name of the defendant and that he may recover costs of the plaintiff. These provisions imply that the plaintiff and the garnishee are to be different persons. They are not only contemplated as occupying adverse relations, but the garnishee is regarded as representing the defendant and is allowed to act for him, which would be repugnant to the first principles of jurisprudence if he might himself be the plaintiff.
In Belknap v. Gibbens, 13 Met. 471, the court expressed itself strongly against such a service, though it did not become necessary in that case to decide whether such a service could be valid or not. In Blaisdell v. Ladd,
We therefore grant the motion of the defendants and dismissthe action for the want of legal service.