99 Me. 420 | Me. | 1904
The plaintiffs sued out of the clerk’s office of this court in York county an original writ of attachment dated February 24, 1903, against the defendant, Richard A. Griefen, returnable at the May Term, 1903, in York county. In this writ the defendant was described as of Chicago in the state of Illinois. The declaration was for merchandise sold and delivered. The writ was placed in the hands of a deputy sheriff for York County, who made upon it the following returns, viz: •
“State of Maine.
York ss. Kittery, Feb. 24, 1903 at three o’clock in the afternoon :
By virtue of the within writ I attached a lot of lumber valued at $200, a lot of brick valued at $100 and a lot of tools valued at $25, as the property of the within named defendant Richard A. Griefen, the value of all amounting to $325, now on the Navy Yard in Kittery in said county, and within five days of said attachment, to wit, on the 27th day of Feb. 1903, I filed in the office of the town of Kittery an attested copy of so much of my return on this writ as relates to the above named attachment with the value of the defendant’s property which I am commanded to attach, the names of the parties; the date of the writ and the court to which the same is returnable.
J. T. Lewis, Deputy Sheriff.”
“York ss. On this 14th day of April, 1903, I made service on the within named defendant by giving in hand to Charles A. Noble, Richard A. Griefen’s agent, a summons for his appearance at court.
J. T. Lewis, Deputy Sheriff.”
No other service was made on the defendant. It is not denied that the goods attached were the property of the defendant. The writ was returned to and entered in court, and counsel for defendant, appearing specially for that purpose, moved the court to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction. The court overruled the motion and defendant’s counsel excepted.
The defendant insists, however, that the return is not sufficiently definite as to the description, quantity and location of the goods to constitute a valid attachment, and hence that according to the return itself the goods were not attached. Although the return is not so definite and explicit in these respects as may seem desirable, and might not be sufficient to protect the officer in proceedings against him, we think it sufficiently shows that goods of the defendant were actually attached on the writ in this State. That is enough for jurisdictional purposes at least. If more definiteness and detail are wanted for other purposes, the return is amendable to that extent. Reed v. Howard, 2 Met. 36; Clement v. Little, 42 N. H. 563.
The defendant again insists that, if ever made, the attachment was dissolved before entry of the action by errors of the. officer in the return made by him to the town clerk, and that this dissolution of the attachment before entry deprived the court of jurisdiction. But the filing of a copy of the return in the statutory office is not a part of the process of attaching personal property, as it is in attaching real estate. Personal property can be attached and the attachment preserved without any such filing, and also if the copy filed be defective. The officer must take actual possession of personal property as he did in this case, and the statutory provision for his filing a copy of his return in the town clerk’s office is for his relief as to keeping possession once taken, substituting public notice of the attachment in certain cases for visible retention of possession. His special property
It affirmatively appearing of record that goods of the defendant were found within this State and attached upon the original writ; that the defendant was not an inhabitant of this State and that service of the writ was made upon his agent in this State according to the statutory provisions; the court is authorized to take jurisdiction of the action, the subject matter being admittedly within its jurisdiction. The defendant not answering to the action, he was properly defaulted and judgment must go against him on his default.
The plaintiff not having asked for a special judgment against the property attached, the judgment will be general and in form against
It was strenuously urged by the plaintiffs that the defendant should not be heard to question the court’s jurisdiction because he had not taken the right course to raise that question, nor taken any course in reason, and also because he had waived it by an appearance in the action. When, however, it is at any time and in any manner in good faith represented to the court by a party or amicus curiae that the court is without jurisdiction of the action, the court will examine the grounds of its jurisdiction to see if any exist before proceeding further. Cassity v. Cota, 54 Maine, 380; Powers v. Mitchell, 75 Maine, 364. In this case we find sufficient grounds without considering the questions of procedure raised by the plaintiffs.
Exceptions overruled. Judgment on the default.