Blaustein v. Standard Oil Co.

54 A.2d 596, 43 Del. 585, 4 Terry 585, 1947 Del. Super. LEXIS 54
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 23, 1947
DocketNo. 136
StatusPublished

This text of 54 A.2d 596 (Blaustein v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaustein v. Standard Oil Co., 54 A.2d 596, 43 Del. 585, 4 Terry 585, 1947 Del. Super. LEXIS 54 (Del. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Speakman, J.

Proceedings by foreign attachment were unknown at the common law. In this State the proceeding is commenced by the filing by the plaintiff of an affidavit and suing out thereon the process which is known as the writ of foreign attachment. “The purpose of the process * * * is to acquire jurisdiction of a defendant who does not reside within the jurisdiction of the court, by taking his property within the jurisdiction and thereby compelling his appearance to the suit of his creditor.” Woolley on Del. Prac. § 1270. The characteristic of non-residence in the process of foreign attachment applies to corporations as well as to individuals. “The seizure of the property of the defendant by the sheriff, holds the property and places it in custodia legis. * * * The lien by process of foreign attachment is wholly dependent upon the subsequent recovery of a judgment on the attachment process, in accordance with the provisions of the statute, and the lien goes back and holds the property as of the date of the attachment. * * * If no judgment can be obtained by reason of any [596]*596matter which defeats or prevents the legal recovery, then such conditional lien is at once dissolved.” Wooley on Del. Prac. § 1271.

The statute provides that in an action against a foreign corporation, “judgment shall be given for the plaintiff at the second term after the issuing of the writ, unless the defendant shall have caused an appearance by attorney to be entered, in which case the like proceedings shall be had, as in suits commenced against a corporation by summons;” (subject to a proviso, not herein pertinent). Rev. Code, § 4631. The “lien upon the property seized * * * shall in no respect be disturbed or affected by the entry of such an appearance, defense and proceedings thereupon, as hereinabove provided, [by the statute] but shall remain, as security pro tanto for the satisfaction of any personal judgment secured against a defendant so entering an appearance,” Rev. Code, § 4634, unless the attachment during the course of the proceedings has been dissolved by the entry of bail in the manner provided by the statute. In other words, where judgment is entered after appearance, in favor of the plaintiff, and the attachment has not been dissolved by the entry of bail, the judgment, when it becomes final, is both a judgment in personam and in rem, and where it is entered in favor of the plaintiff, in default of an appearance it is, when it becomes final, a judgment in rem against the attached property. In the present case judgment was entered for want of an appearance, it has not become final, and is therefore only a judgment nisi in rem.

By the mandate of the Supreme Court this judgment nisi in rem was to become absolute at the expiration of the March Term, A. D. 1947 of the Superior Court, unless prior thereto the defendant proceeded in the manner set out in the mandate, which, in part, was that “Defendant, after notice to the Plaintiff and an opportunity to be heard thereon, shall [597]*597make an application to the Superior Court for leave, under special appearance, to contest the jurisdiction of the Superior Court to enter a judgment for want of an appearance, * * The petition now under consideration, which is for such purpose, was presented within the prescribed time.

The contentions of the plaintiff will be considered in their numerical order.

It is first contended that “a special appearance may be entered only at the first term, and the present application comes too late.”

In support of this contention the plaintiff relies on Section 229, Wooley’s Delaware Practice, where Judge Wooley says: “The special appearance must be entered at the term to which the writ is returnable, and for this purpose the term is frequently called the appearance term. Technically, it should be made on the first day of the term, but by a practice of long standing, it can be made at any time during the term before the final adjournment of the court.”

On the other hand, the petitioners contend that the rule, as stated by Judge Woolley, has no application in the present case.

I do not believe that Judge Wooley intended that the rule should be so construed as to include actions commenced by writs of foreign attachment. I think that the rule is ancillary to the rule of the common law, applicable to the ordinary actions commenced by common law writs. In 1 Tidd 161, it is stated that “it is the universal practice of the courts, that the application to set aside proceedings for irregularity should be made as early as possible, or as is commonly said, in the first instance.”

It seems to me that there was much reason for this rule at the early common law because by 12 G.I. c. 29, and 5 [598]*598G.II, c. 27, it was enacted, that in case defendant shall not appear within eight , days after the return of the writ or process, the plaintiff,.upon making and filing an affidavit of the personal service of such writ or process, may file common bail, or enter an appearance for such defendant, and proceed thereon, as if such defendant had duly appeared himself. 1 Sellon 97.

Our foreign attachment statute makes no provision for personal notice to the Defendant. Under the statute the seizure of his property by the Sheriff is calculated to give him notice, not as early as the first term, but at least before the expiration of the second term. Under these circumstances it would be unreasonable to require the Defendant to make any application at the first term.

The application for leave to enter a special appearance will not be denied on the ground that a special appearance in the action can only be entered at the first term.

The Plaintiff next contends that “Defendant cannot split its motion to contest the validity of the attachment and the consequent jurisdiction of the Court into sections, and urge its objections by successive motions; and the failure to include all of the grounds at the time of the first motion is a waiver of grounds not included.”

My attention has not been directed to any decisions in this State which are in point. The Plaintiff has cited and relies upon decisions from other jurisdictions and quotations from text books in support of his contentions. The text books from which he quotes language are 1 Lewson’s Pl. & Pr. & Forms at Common Law, at p. 190; 42 C. J. at p. 478; 14 Ene. PI. & Pr. at p. 183; 37 Am. Jur. at p. 504; Black on Judg’s, § 691; and Freeman on Judg’s, § 669. I have carefully read the cases cited in support of the language quoted from the text books, some of which are set out and relied [599]*599upon in the Plaintiff’s brief. I do not deem it necessary to refer to any of such supporting cases other than those appearing in the brief.

The petitioners have divided the authorities relied on by the plaintiff into three designated categories. I prefer to divide them into four classes, the last two of which are as stated by the petitioners.

(1) Cases which hold that all known objections or claims for relief against irregularities not urged upon the first motion are waived. (2) Cases in which two motions were made to strike part of a pleading in the course of the proceeding, and the second was denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A.2d 596, 43 Del. 585, 4 Terry 585, 1947 Del. Super. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaustein-v-standard-oil-co-delsuperct-1947.