87 N.C. 101 | N.C. | 1882
We understand the judge's order to mean that the intervening parties should be admitted, not to defend the main action between the plaintiffs and defendants, but to present an issue between themselves and the plaintiffs as the superior rights to the fund in controversy.
Thus understood, the decision in Toms v. Warson,
By parity of reasoning, we should hold that third parties, so intervening, could not be heard to object to the regularity of the attachment proceedings — that being a matter between the parties to the main action; and this objection the defendant might waive, and no one else can make for him. But here, the order of the court restricts them to a single collateral issue as to the better lien on the fund; and consequently there is no error.
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: Cook v. Mining Co.,