19 S.E. 106 | N.C. | 1894
The defendant then entered an appearance to the merits, and, (9) after trial of the issues before Graves, J., there was an appeal by both parties from various rulings, which it is not necessary to set out, inasmuch as the decision of this Court rests solely on the appeal from the refusal of the motion to dismiss the action. It was strenuously argued that the defendant could not be brought into court by attachment and publication because Laws 1891, ch. 120, had provided, as a substitute therefor, service by mailing the summons "to the sheriff or other process officer of the county and State where the defendant resides." This, it was contended, was at the time this action was begun the exclusive mode of service upon nonresidents, unless it had appeared that service could not be had in that mode. We think that mailing process to the sheriff of the county and State where the nonresident resides, to be served upon him, was optional and not exclusive of service by attachment and publication in cases in which these last can be had. This is shown by the wording of the act of 1891 that "it will be sufficient to mail a copy of the summons," etc., in lieu of publication, and by the provision that this shall *7 be "added after" (not substituted for) paragraph (5) of section 218 of The Code. Laws 1893, ch. 79, is not corrective of any error or omission in the act of 1891, but is a legislative construction declaratory of the meaning of the act of 1891, a construction which it would have borne though the act of 1893 had not, out of abundant caution, been passed.
But the attachment is invalid because the action is for unliquidated damages for injury to realty and the attachment was levied prior to chapter 77, Laws 1893. Price v. Cox,
It follows that the attempted service by publication, based on such void attachment, is itself invalid. This point has been (10) so clearly discussed by Shepherd, J., in Winfree v. Bagley,
The defendant appeared specially below, and moved to dismiss the action. This being denied, the judge properly held that an appeal did not lie, and that the defendant should have his exception noted, and proceed. This has already been held in this same case,
Action dismissed.
Cited: Long v. Ins. Co., post, 469; Mullen v. Canal Co.,
(11)