2 Kan. 340 | Kan. | 1864
By the Court,
The only question in this case, is: Was the District Court for Leavenworth County legally authorized to lender, as it attempted to do, the judgment against Welton, in the case of Jacobs v. Welton?
The record shows that Welton was a non-resident, but it no where appears that he was personally served with process, or that he ever appeared to answer in this action. Nor does it appear, either from the affidavit for the attachment, the affidavit for the publication or the return of the sheriff, that he had a particle of property within the jurisdiction of the Court. The sheriff in his return shows that he executed the order of attachment by seizing the steamer “ White Cloud,” but he does not inform us whose property it was, or whether Welton had any interest in it whatever. Under this state of fact, however technically correct may have been the publication, could the Court render a valid judgment ?
Section 78 of the Code provides that service may be' made by publication when an action is brought against a non-resident of the State, (then Territory) having in this State, , (then Territory) property or debts owing to him, sought to be taken by any of the provisional remedies, or to be appropriated in any way. An attachment is a “provisional remedy.’* Under Section 199, a creditor may obtain the writ against the property of his debtor by
The Court below decided that the judgment against Welton was absolutely void, and refused to let the record thereof be read in evidence. We think that decision was right upon whatever ground it may have been placed. The record does not show that Welton ever had an atom of property within the then Territory, or that he had a farthing’s worth of interest in the thing attached.
The judgment will be affirmed.