48 W. Va. 92 | W. Va. | 1900
On the 1st day of June, 1898, George W. Roberts filed his affidavit and bond for an attachment, returnable to August term, 1898, against David Burns and Gideon Burns, partners doing business under the name of Burns Bros., and others, in the circuit court of Wood County, and sued out an order of attachment against the estate of said Burns Bros, to pay the sum of two
Counsel for the appellants insist, first, that because the claim sued for was not due, and was not owned by or owed to the plaintiff,he could not sustain this attachment. It is true that the claims upon which this suit was predicated were not due at .the time the attachment was sued out, and that they had been indorsed by the plaintiff, George W. Roberts, to the Citizens National Bank; yet can we say that for these reasons said Roberts was precluded from maintaining an attachment in equity, based upon proper affidavit, against the makers of said notes? tVe cannot say that either Roberts or the Second National Bank were entitled to recover the proceeds of said four notes on the day this attachment proceeding was instituted, but our statute (section 1, chapter 106, of the Code) provides that an attachment may be sued out in a court of equity for a debt or claim, legal or equitable, whether the same be due or not, upon any of the grounds aforesaid, but the affidavit, in case the claim or de|?t be not due, must show when it will become due.
It is further insisted by counsel for the appellants that the plaintiff, Roberts, has no right to recover the money, and, if he succeeded in getting it, there would be no assurance that he would ever-discharge the notes. In response to this position, attention is called to the fact that at the time of sueing out said order of attachment the plaintiff executed a bond, with approval security, in the penalty of four thousand dollars, conditioned, among other things, to pay all costs and damages which might be awarded against him, or sustained by any person, by reason of suing out the said order of attachment, which bond would protect said bank in the event said Roberts received and misapplied the proceeds of the property levied on under said order of attach-
Returning to the question raised'as to the right of the plaintiff to sue out this order'of attachment before the claims sued on are due, we find it held in Altmeyer v. Caulfield, 37 W. Va. 847, (17 S. E. 409), that “an attachment can Be sued out in equity against an abscounding debtor by the accommodation maker of a negotiable note not yet due, although such maker has not yet paid such note, as he is absolutely bound to do so when it becomes due.” We cannot distinguish that case, in principle, from the one under consideration. Roberts was payee in the notes, and in disconnt-ing them became the indorser to the bank, and liable to pay the same in the event the makers failed so to do, and’had to file a bill in the nature of a bill quia limet to protect himself and the bank to which he had indorsed the paper. This Court has uniformly held that the proceeding by way of attachment is a creature of the statute, and in derogation of the common law, and, to be made effective, must be strictly pursued. The province of the
We next come to consider the question raised as to whether the material facts relied on in said 'affidavit are such as the law requires, and sufficient to sustain the truth of the grounds relied on to obtain the attachment. It may be well to examine the rule which has been applied to attachments, with reference to this portion of the affidavit, by this Court. In Goodman v. Henry, 42 W. Va. 527, (26 S. E. 528), 35 L. R. A. 847, it is held that “a statement of material facts in an affidavit for attachment must be certain and definite, in a legal point of view, so as to inform those entitled to defend the attachment what particular facts they must repel.” See, also, Hale v. Donahue, 25 W. Va. 414.
In my view of the case presented by the record, the circuit court erred in overruling the motion to quash the attachment sued out in this cause. The affidavit being insufficient, the attachment should have been quashed; and the plaintiff, by his bill, not having shown himself entitled to the proceeds of the notes sued on, hut, on the contrary, that they were the property of the Second National Bank of Parkersburg, and equity only having taken jurisdiction by reason of the attachment, the defendants’ demurrer should have been sustained. The decree is reversed, and the bill dismissed.
Reversed.