61 Miss. 170 | Miss. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
While it has been repeatedly said by this court that in suits by attachment the plaintiff must recover a judgment of condemnation against the property seized before he can enter into a contest with a claimant of such property, it has never been held that to constitute such judgment there must be a formal sentence of condemnation, such as is made in proceedings strictly in rem. As to the property seized, these proceedings have frequently been styled proceedings in rem, and it is not altogether incorrect so to designate them, since the property is in custodia legis, and is specifically subjected to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s demand; but such suits are also proceedings in personam, since it is the personal obilgation of
Judgment reversed.