delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit upon á promissory note. The only defence now material is that the plaintiff had recovered a judg *91 ment upon the same note in a previous suit in Texas which purported to bind the defendant personally as well as to foreclose a lien by which the note was seemed. When the former suit was begun the defendant, Mabee, was domiciled in Texas but had left the State with intent to establish a home elsewhere, his family, however, still residing there. He subsequently returned to Texas for a short time and later established his domicile in Missouri. The only service upon him was by publication in a newspaper once a week for four successive weeks after his final departure from the State, and he did not appear in the suit. The Supreme Court of the State held that this satisfied the Texas statutes and that the judgment was a good personal judgment, overruling the plaintiff’s contention that to give it that effect was to deny the constitutional right to due process of law. 175 S. W. Rep, 676.
The foundation of jurisdiction is physical power, although in civilized times it is not necessary to maintain that power throughout proceedings properly begun, and although submission to the jurisdiction by appearance may take the place of service upon the person.
Michigan Trust Co.
v.
Ferry,
*92
There is no dispute that service by publication does not warrant a personal judgment against a non-resident.
Pennoyer
v.
Neff,
Whatever may be the rule with regard to. decrees concerning status or its incidents,
Haddock
v.
Haddock,
The usual occasion for testing the principle to be applied would be such as we have supposed, where the defendant *93 was denying the validity of the judgment against him. But the obligations of the judgment are reciprocal and the fact that here the defendant is asserting and the plaintiff denying its personal effect does not alter the case. Whittier v. Wendell, 7 N. H. 257. Rangely v. Webster, 11 N. H. 299. Middlesex Bank v. Butman, 29 Maine, 19. The personal judgment was not merely voidable, as was assumed in the slightly different case of Henderson v. Staniford, 105. Massachusetts, 504, but was void. See Needham v. Thayer, 147 Massachusetts, 536. In Henderson v. Staniford the absent defendant intended to return to his State.
Judgment reversed.
