The plaintiffs’ counsel rightly admit that they cannot maintain against Denny the count on the judgment recovered against him and Parker in Virginia; because he had no such notice of the suit in which that judgment was rendered, as gave to the court which rendered it any jurisdiction of his person. Bissell v. Briggs,
The Rev. Sts. c. 92, §§ 12, 13, and Gen. Sts. c. 126, §§ 13,14, provide, first, that when, in actions on contract brought against several defendants, the writ is duly served on one or more of them, and no legal service is made on the others, the action may proceed against those who are duly served with process; and second, that if a judgment rendered against one or more of several joint contractors shall remain unsatisfied, an action on the same contract may be afterwards maintained against any of the other joint contractors, in like manner as if the contract had been joint and several. The first of these provisions ratified the decisions of the court in Tappan v. Bruen,
In the present case, we can give no legal effect, as it respects Denny, to the judgment in Virginia, and can, at the most, regard it as valid only against Parker, and treat it as if it had been rendered against him alone; or, in the above cited statute language, as “ a judgment against one of several joint contractors,’’
The case of Catskill Bank v. Hooper,
