The manner in - which one who is arrested on execution shall give notice to his creditor of his desire to take the oath for the relief of poor debtors is distinctly set forth in St. 1857, c. 141, $ 4, which provides in express terms that “ when the plaintiff is dead, or not a resident in the county where the arrest is made, the notice shall be served upon the agent or attorney, if he lives in the county, or has his usual place of business therein ; but if no such agent or attorney be found within the county, such notice may be served upon the officer who made the arrest.” The notice in this case wais served upon one of the plaintiffs; and it is admitted that none of them resided in the same county where the arrest was made, and that, at the time of the service of the notice, John M. Way, the attorney who made the writ, had an office in Boston, though then temporarily absent from the Commonwealth; and also that the officer who made the arrest had an office in Boston. The plaintiffs now insist, as they may do, upon an exact compliance by the debtor with the statute provisions as to notice; and, if such notice has not been given, the proceedings before the magistrate were not in conformity with the law, and therefore there has been no legal surrender of the debtor for examination, as required by his recognizance, and no authority on the part of the magistrate to administer the oath to the debtor.
The rule prescribed by the statute required in the present case a notice to be served upon the attorney of the plaintiffs, residing in the county of Suffolk, and if no such agent or
Exceptions overruled.
