{after stating the facts as above).
The first error assigned and insisted on is the ruling of the court sustaining the plea in abatement filed February 4th, 1889. Appellants, who were plaintiffs below, commenced a suit of attachment against appellees, and on the fifth day after the affidavit and bond were filed, and after the writ of attachment had been levied, a praecipe for summons returnable to the following rule day was filed. The praecipe was the usual -one in ordinary actions of assumpsit, and made no reference to the attachment proceedings. A declaration with bill of particulars in assumpsit was filed, •and plaintiffs treated the entire proceedings as in one suit, but a different view was entertained by defendants, and considering that two separate and distinct actions had been instituted on the same cause of action, a plea to abate the second on account of the pendency of the first was interposed. The court, it seems, agreed with the view entertained by defendants, and sustained the plea in abatement. Whether or not the decision of the court in sustaining the plea was erroneous, does not appear to us to be of any practical importance in this case, as the declaration and bill of particulars filed in the second suit, as considered by the court, was withdrawn by plaintiffs and re-filed in the attachment suit at the time the plea in abatement was sustained. Defendants’ motion to dismiss the attachment suit on account of laches in not pleading therein was overruled, and from plaintiffs’ standpoint, regarding all the proceedings .as in one suit, they were not injured by the decision of the court on the plea in abatement, as the same pleadings which they had already filed were instantly re-filed in the attachment
The third assignment of error, which we will next consider, calls in question the correctness of the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrers to plaintiffs’ replications. After plaintiffs obtained leave and reffled their declaration in what the court considered the first suit instituted, defendants interposed a plea that the attachment bond filed therein was not executed by plaintiffs, nor by any person acting in their name and behalf by virtue of a power of attorney under seal. This plea was considered in the nature of one in abatement of the attachment suit on account of the alleged defective execution of the attachment bond, and no question was raised in the lower court, and none suggested here as to the proper practice of reaching such a defect in the bond, if it existed, by plea in abatement. All the replications to this plea were overruled. The first one states in substance that before the attachment bond was executed and filed, plaintiffs authorized their agent, by parol, to execute the bond, and they were bound thereby. The second one alleges in substance that subsequent to the execution and filing of the bond plaintiffs ratified and confirmed the same; and the third one asserts that subsequent to the execution and filing of the bond, and on a date mentioned, plaintiffs executed under seal a written ratification of the bond. The bond is executed in the name and purports to be the obligation of plaintiffs in the attachment suit, but its execution was by an agent.
There was no error in the action of the court ref us - ing to strike from the files the traverse of the affidavit upon which the attachment was based on the ground that it was not filed in time, the only objection urged here. A defendant has up to the trial of the suit, upon its merits, the right to traverse the allegations in plaintiff’s affidavit, and this right is availabie as' well after as before plea to the action. Kennedy vs. Mitchell, 4 Fla. 457. There was considerable delay in filing the traverse in the present suit, but it does not
An order will be entered reversing the judgment for further proceedings.
