65 N.J.L. 506 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs challenge the propriety of the inquiry that was determined against them. They urge, and we think rightly, that after the general appearance entered in their suit no motion to quash the writ that formed its foundation should have been entertained. The learned judge who decided otherwise did so because the act of 1893 did not, in terms, authorize an appearance j but no such express authority was needed. The writ of attachment was a very ancient judicial process designed to coerce an appearance on pain of eventual outlawry. Normally it followed the summons, in default of appearance, but in some casee might be issued without previous resort to that writ. 3 Bl. Com. 280. By “An act to regulate the practice of courts of the law,” passed February 14th, 1799 (Pat. L., p. 355), it was enacted that the first process in personal actions where the-plaintiff is not entitled to bail should be a summons, and where the
It is clear that the attachment authorized by the act of 1893 is a common law writ with the usual common law incidents. The act is entitled “An act to regulate the practice of courts of law.” It is enacted in the third section that the issuing of the writ of attachment authorized “shall be deemed the beginning of an, action of law, and that no summons or other mesne process shall be necessary to bring the defendant into court, and that the plaintiff shall file his declaration within thirty days after the return day of said writ, and shall rule the defendant or defendants to plead thereto, which rule shall be served or published, as the court may direct, and that the practice and procedure in the action shall be the same as if the action had been begun by summons, except as herein otherwise provided;” and, in section 4, that the property attached shall remain as security for any judgment that may be recovered, and that special execu
A general appearance waives irregularities and.defects of form and service of process. It remains to consider if it waives insufficiency of the proof to support an attachment issued under the act of 1893, namely, the proof that would be required in order to authorize a capias ad respondendum in actions of contract. In Logan v. Lawshe, 33 Vroom 567, this court passed, without deciding, the question of the right to challenge the sufficiency of the affidavit on which a capias had been ordered and issued, where the motion to quash was made after the defendant had appeared and filed special bail; but. it certainly has never been supposed that such right exists. The enactment that the filing of special bail shall be no waiver of the right to apply for an order to take testimony concerning the truth of the affidavits upon which the order for bail was made (Gen. Stat., p. 2545, § 65) would seem to imply that all defects on the face of the affidavits were waived.
As to attachments, it has been directly held that after a general appearance in a suit against an absent debtor it is too late to move to quash the suit for insufficiency of the affidavit on which it was issued. Connelly v. Lerche, 27 Vroom 95. By analogy that precedent rules the present case.
Looking again at the analogy of the act authorizing attachments against absconding or absent debtors, we find the practice settled against, in any way, reaching unattached property of the debtor after a general appearance duly noticed. There cannot be two writs extant between the same parties in the same county. Harris v. Linnard, 4 Halst. 58; Duffin v. Wolf, 1 Zab. 475. But provision is made for reaching-property not attached and property acquired after the attachment. Naturally we look for judicial determination of the effect of a general appearance and notice upon these provisions. Section 46, in language that is unlimited, gives the auditor authority to seek and recover such property; yet in Jackson v. Johnson, 22 Vroom 457, 461, this court held that a general appearance and notice terminate the auditor’s rights in that respect. Mr. Justice Magie, speaking for this court, uses this language: “The express declaration that the suit shall proceed as if commenced by summons and that the lien acquired should be continued leaves no room for inference that a lien could be afterward acquired on property discovered under the inquiry permitted by section 46.” Similarly the declaration of the act of 1893, that the practice and procedure in the action shall be the same as if the action had been begun by summons, except as therein otherwise provided, and that the property attached should remain during the pendency of the suit as security for any judgment the plaint
Let the order under review be reversed, with costs, and let the record be remitted to the Circuit Court for the entry there of an order quashing only the alias attachment.