delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case is here on a writ of certiorari to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. We granted the writ because the court below had decided an important question of local law in a way probably in conflict with applicable local decisions and probably had misconstrued certain federal statutes and a decision of this Court thereunder.
The basic question here involved is whether a federal district court, in the absence of jurisdiction in personam and after removal of a cause from a state court, where jurisdiction in rem over certain .property of a defendant. *301 has already been acquired, can issue an order of attachment or garnishment against other property óf the same defendant.
Petitioner, a resident of Ohio, brought suit on June 19, 1930, in a state court in Ohio against respondent, a nonresident corporation organized under Canadian law, on a contract claim for personal services rendered. 1 Summons was concurrently issued, but personal service was never had; and simultaneously, an affidavit in attachment and garnishment was filed. A second affidavit in attachment and garnishment was filed on June 27, 1930, naming additional persons; and shortly thereafter certain funds and property of respondent were garnisheed. Subsequently, service by publication was completed; and soon afterwards, and before judgment,' respondent appeared specially and obtained a removal of the cause to the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Ohio, Western Division. In the District Court respondent also appeared specially and moved to quash the service by publication and to dismiss the attachment and garnishment. Nothing further was done in the cause for over five years. Then, on February 17, 1936, petitioner, with leave of the District Court, filed a Supplemental and amended petition repeating in substance the allegations of the original petition; and a supplemental affidavit in garnishment which named as garnishees the same persons designated in the original affidavits of June 1930 in the state court. On the same day, the District Court issued an order of attachment and notices to garnishees. Under the latter additional funds in the hands of one of the garnishees were reached. And on April 11,1936, respondents, again appeared specially in the District *302 Court, and moved, inter alia, to dismiss the attachment and garnishment under the supplemental affidavit of February 17, 1936. After removal to the District Court there was neither personal service, nor, so far as appears, service by publication.
By its motions of January 26, 1931, and April 11, 1936, respondent asserted that the affidavits in attachment and garnishment were defective and void under Ohio law; that there was no property of respondent within the jurisdiction of the District Court or the state court on which any valid attachment could be or was levied; that there was no property of respondent in the possession of any of the garnishees; that the attachment and garnishment and the service of summons were void by reason of incorrect designation of respondent; that there was no lawful service of summons under the supplemental and amended petition made on respondent; that the supplemental attachment and garnishment under the amended petition were also void for lack of personal service; and that the District Court had no jurisdiction óver either the respondent or its property appropriate for the maintenance of this action.
After oral argument on respondent’s motions, the District Court entered an order discharging the attachment and garnishment and striking the petition from the files of the court, on the grounds that the affidavits in attachment and garnishment, dated June 19 and June 27, 1930, were defective and void, and that the supplemental affidavit in attachment and garnishment was also void and ineffective, since no personal service had been made on respondent. On appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals the judgment was affirmed on the grounds that the original attachment or garnishment in the state court was premature- and void; that on removal the federal District Court could not validate an attachment not perfected in the state court proceeding; and that attachment may not *303 issue in a federal District Court until the defendant has been personally served or has voluntarily appeared.
Of the various questions raised below and briefed here, only those urged in the petition for certiorari and incidental to their determination will be considered on review.
General Talking Pictures Corp.
v.
Western Electric Co.,
Before coming to the basic question here involved, namely, whether the garnishment secured in the District Court under the supplemental affidavit of February 17, 1936, was void, there are two. preliminary questions. These are (1) whether the notary public before whom the affidavits in attachment and garnishment of June 19 and June 27, 1930, were taken was disqualified, thus rendering the garnishment proceedings void and of no effect; and (2). whether the garnishments obtained in the state court were premature and void because they were secured without personal service and prior to the first publication of notice of constructive service.
First.
The Ohio General Code provided that an affidavit might be used to obtain a provisional remedy such as attachment or garnishment (§ 11523), and that an affidavit might be made before any person authorized to take depositions (§ 11524).
Since Drennan was not a “relative or attorney” of petitioner, he was not disqualified to take the affidavit unless within the meaning of the Ohio statute he was “otherwise interested in the event of the action or proceeding.” The District Court held that he was so interested. We do not so interpret the Ohio law. Absent some legal or material interest, it seems to us, on the basis of the Ohio authorities which we have found, that there must be some immediate interest in the action akin to that of a relative in order for the notary to run afoul of the statutory prohibition. Disability thus depends on the particular circumstances of each case — the degree of intimacy in relationship between petitioner and notary. In Rhinelander Co. v. Pittsburgh Co., 15 Ohio C. C. (N. S.) 286, an Ohio court held that a young man working as a salaried employee for a firm of attorneys retained in the case was not disqualified by the foregoing section from taking an affidavit in the case as notary. The interest which disqualifies under the Ohio statute, said that Court, is “some legal, certain and immediate interest such as formerly disqualified a witness from testifying.” Id., p. 286. Certainly, if an employee of one who himself is disqualified to act as notary is qualified so to act, an employee of a corporation whose officer is suing not on behalf of the corporation but for himself would seem to be similarly qualified under Ohio law. This seems to us especially persuasive, since the notary in question was in fact taking not a deposition but an affidavit and since *305 the affidavit was not for use as evidence. 2 Accordingly, we conclude that the affidavits óf June 19 and June 27,. 1930, were not defective because they were sworn to before D. W. Drennan. 3
*306 Second. Sec. 11279 of the Ohio General Code provides that “A civil action must be commenced by filing in the office of the clerk .of the proper court a petition, and causing a summons to be issued thereon.” Sec. 11819 provides that “In a civil action for the recovery of money, at or after its commencement, the plaintiff may have an attachment against the property of the defendant” upon various enumerated grounds. In this case the petition was filed, summons was issued, and an affidavit in attachment and garnishment was filed — all on June 19, 1930. It would seem, therefore, that § 11819 was satisfied. But the Circuit Court of Appeals held that an attachment which issued before personal service was obtained, or before the beginning of publication for substituted service, was premature and void. Under that test the attachments and garnishments sought in the state-court on June 19 and June 27, 1930, were defective since personal service was never had and since service by publication was not commenced until several months later.
The Circuit Court of Appeals reached this conclusion in reliance upon its earlier decision in
Doherty
v.
Cremering,
We think the Circuit Court of Appeals erred. The chronology of events in the Doherty case is the' same as the chronology here — attachment was issued on the day the petition was filed and substantially in "advance of commencement of service by publication. Personal service was not had. The court-relied upon § 11230 of the Ohio General Code and upon Seibert v. Switzer, supra. Sec. 11230 is contained in Chapter 2 of Division 1 of *307 Title IV of the Ohio General Code. Title IV is entitled “Procedure in Common Pleas Court.” Chapter 2 of Division 1 is .entitled “Limitation-of Actions.” Sec. Í1230 provides: “An action shall be deemed to'be commenced within the meaning of this chapter, as to each deferidant, at the date' of the summons which is served on him or ori a codefendant who is a joint contractor, or otherwise united in interest with him. When service by publication is proper, the action shall be deemed to be commenced at the date of the first publication, if it be regularly made.” (Italics added.)
It seems clear to us that the words “An action shall be deemed to be commenced within the meaning of this chapter” confine the operation of the section to matters concerning the limitation of actions, the subject to which the chapter is expressly devoted. The. Supreme Court Commission of Ohio in
Bacher
v.
Shawhan,
On that authority we conclude that “at or after its commencement” as used in § 11819 means the commence
*308
ment described in. § 11279, not the commencement described in § 11230. Additional support for this conclusion is found in
Seibert
v.
Switzer,
“The statute does not authorize an attachment except in an action, and the clerk of the court has no authority to issue the order of attachment until an action is brought and the relation of plaintiff and defendant is established in the case.
“An action is commenced or brought, within the meaning of sections 192 and 193, by the filing of a petition and *309 ■causing a summons to issue thereon. Code, § 55 . . .” Id., p. 665.
The Seibert case and the Bacher case thus seem to be wholly consistent. An order of attachment issued prior to the filing of a petition and issuance of summons is void; an order of attachment issued after filing of the petition and the issuance of summons but prior to the commencement of service by publication is valid, though personal service is not had.
In view of these Ohio authorities, we conclude that the attachments or garnishments secured in the state court were not premature or void because obtained prior to personal service or before commencement of service by publication. See also,
St. John
v.
Parsons,
Third.
This brings us to the main issue in the case— whether a federal District Court has the power to issue an order of attachment or garnishment in a removed cause if jurisdiction
in rem
has been obtained prior to removal. The Circuit Court of Appeals relied upon the rule laid down in
Big Vein Coal Co.
v.
Read,
The argument for extension or application of the rule followed from
Toland
v.
Sprague
to
Big Vein Coal Co.
v.
Read, supra,
to cases such as the instant one loses its persuasiveness. Ingrained in those decisions is the feeling that it would be unjust for a person to have his rights passed upon in the absence of the notice afforded by personal service, so that he might appear and defend himself. That philosophy was perhaps best expressed by Mr. Justice Miller sitting in circuit in
Nazoro
v.
Cragin,
But we need not rely merely on inferences drawn from statutory construction, since the Congress has provided plaintiffs in federal courts with procedural remedies available in state courts. Sec. 915 of the Revised Statutes provides: .
“In common-law causes in the district courts the plaintiff shall be entitled to similar remedies, by attachment or other process, against the property of the defendant, which were, on June 1, 1872, provided by the laws of the State in which such court is held for the courts thereof; and such district courts may, from time to time, by general rules, adopt such State laws as may be in force in the States where they are held in relation to attachments and other process. Similar preliminary affidavits or proofs, and similar security, as required by such State laws, shall be first furnished by the party, seeking such attachment or other remedy.”
' This section when read w|th § 646, indicates to us that where jurisdiction in rem- has been acquired prior to removal, plaintiff may obtain in the federal court after removal such orders of- attachment or garnishment as would have been available to him had he been permitted to remain in the state court. Such interpretation merely makes impossible for a lien obtained in a state court prior to removal to be extended by the federal cotirt to other property of the same defendant. It introduces no new element in the statutory scheme for, as we have said, the lien which § 646 protects may often have been obtained without .personal service. The policy which recognizes the validity of a Jien preserved by virtue of § 646, though personal service is lacking, permits extension of that lien by a federal District Court under like circumstances to other property of the same defendant by reason of § 915.
*313 This holding can be brought within the rule of the Big Vein Coal Company case, supra, if that decision is narrowly limited. For in one sense it can be said that attachment or garnishment is here used only as an “auxiliary remedy.” Id., p. 37. The garnishment effected under the affidavit of February 17, 1936, if valid under Ohio law, would merely extend the proceedings in rem to reach other property of the same defendant. Accordingly, if that extension is permissible under § 915, it is not defective merely because jurisdiction in personam is absent. Whether or not such extension is permissible is a matter of state law on which we do not pass. Since the case will be remanded, that question and other questions raised by the respondent can be more appropriately disposed of by the District Court.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Paris E. Singer was also named a defendant in the original petition but died pending the action. Since subsequent proceedings were continued against respondent alone, the cause is treated as if Devon Syndicate, Limited, were the sole defendant.
There is Ohio authority for the view that § 11532 of the Ohio General Code under which the notary’s disqualification is asserted was intended only to define and regulate the taking of affidavits to be' used as testimony in a judicial proceeding..
City Commission of Gallipolis
v.
State,
Another reason urged by respondent for the- invalidity of the affidavits in question is that the notary was disqualified by § 121 of the Ohio General Code which provides: “No banker, broker, cashier, director, teller, or clerk of a bank, banker or broker, or other person holding an official relation to- a bank, banker, or broker, shall be competent to act as notary public in' any matter in which' such bank, banker, or broker is interested.” Respondent claims that the corporation of which petitioner was an officer and by which the notary was employed, as well as the predecessor partnership, was a municipal bond broker; that petitioner-, being an *306 officer of the corporation, was himself a broker; an'd that therefore the notary was a “clerk of” or “other person holding an official relation to” a “broker.” Suffice it to note (1) that the notary was not in the employ of petitioner; and (2) that neither the corporation nor its predecessor partnership appears to be “interested” in the action. As alleged, the action seems to be personal to petitioner.
It should also be noted that § 11230 (Civil Code, § 20) was substantially the same then as now. Though that section provided that “within the meaning of this section” an action where service by publication was proper should “be deemed commenced at the date of the first publication,” the court determined the date of commencement by § 11279 without mentioning § 11230.
Sec. 646 provides: “When any suit shall be removed from a State court to a district court of the United States, any attachment or sequestration of the goods or estate of the defendant had in such suit in the State court shall hold the goods or estate so attached or sequestered to answer the final judgment or decree in the same manner as by law they would have been held to answer final judgment or decree had it been rendered by the court in which said suit was commenced. All bonds, undertakings, or security given by either party in such suit prior to its removal shall remain valid and effectual notwithstanding said removal; and all injunctions, orders, and other proceedings had in such suit prior to its removal shall remain in full force and effect until dissolved or modified by the court to which such suit shall be removed.”
