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S. M. Stockslager and George C. Heard, for appellee.
Mr. Justice McKENNA delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the supreme court of the territory of Arizona affirming a judgment of the district court of the Fourth udicial district, in and for Yavapai county, for $12,332.08, in favor of appellee, and against appellant, who was plaintiff in error below. The action was upon an open account and a large number of assigned accounts. An attachment was sued out, and the mines and mining property of appellant company were seized. Judgment was rendered by default, and the property attached ordered sold.
The judgment is attacked on two grounds: (1) That there was no personal service on appellant; (2) that the attachment was void because the writ was issued before the issuance of summons.
It is conceded that the appellant is an Illinois corporation, and that there was no personal service upon it. Was the attachment issued in accordance with the statutes of Arizona? If it was not, the judgment must be reversed. Pennoyer v. Neff,
The record shows that the complaint was filed December 4, 1894; that on the 24th of that month affidavit and bond for attachment were filed, and the writ was issued. The return shows the seizure of the property on the 26th of December, the day summons was issued. [173 U.S. 123, 125] The Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1887 (chapter 1 of title 4) provided for attachments and garnishments as follows:
Paragraph 649 provides that 'all civil suits in courts of record shall be commenced by complaint filed in the office of the clerk of such court.' Therefore, if paragraph 42 (section 3) was in force at the time the writ of attachment was issued, to wit, on the 24th of December, 1894, there is no doubt of the validity of the writ. But it is contended that the paragraph was not in force, bec use, it is claimed, it had been repealed by an act passed by the legislative assembly of the territory, approved March 6, 1891
This act is entitled 'An act to amend chapter 1, title 4, entitled 'Attachments and garnishments." Rev. St. Ariz. 1887. Section 1 is as follows:
The amending act is more than a revision of the provisions of the statute of 1887; it is a substitute for them. It, however, does not expressly repeal paragraph 42. Does it do so by implication? Expressing the rule of repeal by implication, Mr. Justice Strong, in Henderson's Tobacco, 11 Wall. 657, said:
May paragraph 40, as amended, subsist with paragraph 42? Certainly not, if the former prescribes the time when the writ of attachment may be issued, and not the time when it may be levied. Its identical language was section 120 of the practice act of California, and was continued as 537 of the Code of Civil Procedure of said state, and was such at the time the act of 1891 of Arizona was passed. When part of the practice act, it was construed by the supreme court of California in the case of Low v. Henry, 9 Cal. 538. Mr. Justice Burnett, speaking for the court, said:
Counsel for appellee, however, urges that this decision is explained by the fact that by the California laws a suit was commenced by filing a complaint and the issuance of a summons, and that the decision of the court was that, the attachment having been issued before summons was issued, it was issued before the commencement of suit, and hence was void on that ground. We think not. 'To have the property of the defendant attached' was construed to mean the issuance of the attachment, and it was held to be a nullity, if done before the summons was issued. If, however, ambiguity could arise under the practice act and the Code of Civil Procedure as originally passed, it could not arise after the Code was amended in 1874, and as it existed at the time or the Arizona enactment of 1891. At that time the issuance of summons [173 U.S. 123, 130] was not the commencement of the action. The amendment of 1874 (Amend. Codes 1873-74, p. 296) provided that 'civil actions in the courts of the state are commenced by filing a complaint' (section 405), and summons may be issued at any time within one year thereafter (section 406). Section 537, which provided for the issuance of an attachment, and which was adopted by the Arizona statute, was not changed. Notwithstanding the amendment of 1874, we have been cited to no case reversing or modifying Low v. Henry; nor is it claimed that the practice did not continue in accordance with the ruling in that case. Indeed, how could there be change? The provisions of the Code did not eed further interpretation. The procedure was clearly defined. An action was commenced by filing a complaint. Within a year summons might be issued, and when issued the plaintiff might have the property of the defendant attached; that is, have an attachment issued.
The language of paragraph 40, as amended in 1891, having been taken from the California Code, it is presumed that it was taken with the meaning it had there, and hence we hold it worked a repeal of paragraph 42 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1887; and the judgment of the supreme court of the territory is
Reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
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Citation: 173 U.S. 123
No. 140
Decided: February 20, 1899
Court: United States Supreme Court
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