Ordinarily, the giving of a replevy bond in an attachment proceeding constitutes a personal appearance.
Code
§ 8-901. However, “The giving of a replevy bond does not preclude a defendant in attachment from objecting to the jurisdiction of the court over his person.”
Drake v. Lewis,
We have reached the opinion that the defendant preserved his objection to the court’s jurisdiction of his person up to and until the time he filed a cross-action.
The rule is well stated in
The defendant by filing a cross-action assumed the position of a plaintiff seeking affirmative relief against the party who originally brought the action.
Hudgins Contracting Co. v. Redmond,
Accordingly, the trial court erred in sustaining the defendant’s plea to the jurisdiction and in dismissing plaintiff’s declaration in attachment, because the defendant waived his plea to the jurisdiction by filing a cross-action.
The court did not err in dismissing the purported attachment because the attachment was initiated upon a void instrument purporting to be an affidavit. Since a corporation, an artificial person, cannot make an affidavit
(Coffee v. McCaskey Register Co.,
Judgment reversed in part, affirmed in part.
