The opinion of the court was delivered, October 23d 1871, by
Agnew, J.
Noble and Lamb, the defendants below, were sued by the Thompson Oil Company, in debt, on a recognisance of bail in error for Snow, Burgess, Wright and Woods, defendants, in a judgment obtained against them by the Thompson Oil Company. Before this suit an attachment had been issued out of the Supreme Court of New York, by certain creditors of the Thompson Oil Company, and served on Snow, Burgess et al., the original defendants, to attach the debt, in the judgment recovered by the Thompson Oil Company, against them. That attachment has been pleaded in abatement to suspend the present suit on the recognisance of the bail in error, and is resisted by Messrs. Brown, Marshall and Walker, claiming as assignees of the debt before the attachment in New York.
But, clearly, the plea of attachment can have no such effect, for the present defendants are not parties to the attachment; were not served, and cannot J)e affected by any judgment which the court of New York shall give in the attachment. They are liable, at all events, for the debt and costs secured by their recognisance, which can be recovered from them only in the name of •the Thompson Oil Company. The attaching creditors cannot sue [413]*413them, and if judgment be given for those attaching creditors against the original defendants as garnishees, they can protect themselves only by coming into the Pennsylvania court and claiming payment by substitution to the Thompson Oil Company in this suit. These defendants, Noble and Lamb, are not concerned in the contest for the money between the assignees and the attaching creditors; neither are legal plaintiffs, but must claim the intervention of the court upon the fund itself. That is a question of distribution as to whom the fund shall be paid after it is collected. These defendants can protect themselves by payment into court, and an issue between the assignees 'and attaching creditors will determine the right to the fund. As between them there possibly may be a suspension of judgment until the attachment in New York be determined, but on this point we give no opinion. To implicate these defendants in the attachment proceedings, they must have been served with the writ, so that the jurisdiction and judgment of the Supreme Court of New York could be made effective against them by its process.
It is said the debt, however, has been attached and, therefore, they are implicated. This is a mistake, their debt has never been attached. The debt they owe is the penal sum in their recognisance, which has not been attached. The recognisance, it is true, is conditioned for the payment of the debt of the original defendants, with costs, upon their failure to prosecute their writ of error with effect. But that debt and costs are the measure only of the liability of these defendants, and are not the debts of these defendants, who can become fixed for the penalty of their recognisance only on showing the non-performance of its conditions.
The recognisance is, therefore, a distinct ground or cause of action, which must be attached, with service on them to make a plea of attachment available either in abatement or in bar.
And even had they been served the plea would be bad according the opinion of Justice Strong in Brown v. Scott, 1 P. F. Smith 862 : “ It neither abates nor bars an action (he says), and pleading it can have no other effect than giving notice of the claim of the attaching creditor, and to enable the court to mould the judgment and protect the rights of the parties.”
But this judgment must be reversed on the ground of a mistrial. When the court overruled the demurrer of the defendants to the replication of the plaintiffs to their plea of the pending foreign attachment, it left the cause standing upon immaterial issues. The plea in abatement, we have seen, was itself bad, and the replication to it, that the debt had been assigned by the plaintiff to Messrs. Brown et al, was not material to the cause.
Nor was it a material issue to the defendants that the New York attaching creditors of the Thompson Oil Company had [414]*414commenced a previous suit in Pennsylvania for their debts. The result was that the case was tried without any issuable plea on the part of these defendants; and as it was tried against their protest, entered upon the record, no presumption of waiver or acquiesence can be made against them, while the issues presented by the plaintiff’s double replication were immaterial to the case. The judgment is therefore reversed, the plea and replication thereto are stricken from the record, and a procedendo awarded.
On the return of the record by a remittitur from the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs on the 31st of October 1871, took a rule 'on the defendants to plead in fifteen days or judgment. November 10th, the defendants pleaded, “ nil debet and payment, &c.” November 29th, on leave, the defendants withdrew their plea. On the same day the defendants Noble and Lamb pleaded the attachment, &c., substantially the same plea as that pleaded before the reversal. On the 2d of January 1872, this plea was stricken off; the plea “nil debet and payment, &c.,” was same day entered by the court; and Theodore Wright, one of the defendants not served, asked to enter his appearance in the case; February 27th, leave granted to “ Wright to appear without prejudice to the rights of either party and without any right to continuance by reason of said appearance, and said defendant required to plead during this day.” On the same day the court struck off the plea of “nil debet and payment, &c.,” without consent of defendants’ attorneys. Same day Wright filed a special plea, averring that the debt had been attached by process from the Supreme Court of New York, &c., as set out in former special plea; and that in the issue directed between Tweed the receiver and the garnishees, the plaintiffs recovered a judgment of $30,334.11 against the garnishees; on which judgment and execution was issued,“by means whereof the said judgment became and was entirely satisfied.” On the same day the plea .was stricken off by the court. The case being on the trial list, March 5th 1872, judgment was on motion entered against Noble, Lamb and Wright for want of a plea, the defendants’ counsel protesting; the judgment was liquidated at “ $54,000, real debt $33,894.66.”
The defendants took out a writ of error and assigned for error:
1. Striking off the plea.
2. Entering judgment for want of a plea.
The case was heard by the Supreme Court, October 26th 1872, before Thompson, C. J., Read, Agnew, Sharswood and Williams, JJ.
G. Shiras, Jr., and G. W. Biddle, for plaintiffs in error.
J. C. Marshall and J. H. Walker, for defendants in error.
[415]*415The opinion of the court was delivered, November 4th 1872, by
The court below erred in striking off the plea in this case. In effect the plea alleged a legal recovery and satisfaction of the debt, for which the recognisors in this case were liable on their recognisance as bail in error.
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The opinion of the court was delivered, October 23d 1871, by
Agnew, J.
Noble and Lamb, the defendants below, were sued by the Thompson Oil Company, in debt, on a recognisance of bail in error for Snow, Burgess, Wright and Woods, defendants, in a judgment obtained against them by the Thompson Oil Company. Before this suit an attachment had been issued out of the Supreme Court of New York, by certain creditors of the Thompson Oil Company, and served on Snow, Burgess et al., the original defendants, to attach the debt, in the judgment recovered by the Thompson Oil Company, against them. That attachment has been pleaded in abatement to suspend the present suit on the recognisance of the bail in error, and is resisted by Messrs. Brown, Marshall and Walker, claiming as assignees of the debt before the attachment in New York.
But, clearly, the plea of attachment can have no such effect, for the present defendants are not parties to the attachment; were not served, and cannot J)e affected by any judgment which the court of New York shall give in the attachment. They are liable, at all events, for the debt and costs secured by their recognisance, which can be recovered from them only in the name of •the Thompson Oil Company. The attaching creditors cannot sue [413]*413them, and if judgment be given for those attaching creditors against the original defendants as garnishees, they can protect themselves only by coming into the Pennsylvania court and claiming payment by substitution to the Thompson Oil Company in this suit. These defendants, Noble and Lamb, are not concerned in the contest for the money between the assignees and the attaching creditors; neither are legal plaintiffs, but must claim the intervention of the court upon the fund itself. That is a question of distribution as to whom the fund shall be paid after it is collected. These defendants can protect themselves by payment into court, and an issue between the assignees 'and attaching creditors will determine the right to the fund. As between them there possibly may be a suspension of judgment until the attachment in New York be determined, but on this point we give no opinion. To implicate these defendants in the attachment proceedings, they must have been served with the writ, so that the jurisdiction and judgment of the Supreme Court of New York could be made effective against them by its process.
It is said the debt, however, has been attached and, therefore, they are implicated. This is a mistake, their debt has never been attached. The debt they owe is the penal sum in their recognisance, which has not been attached. The recognisance, it is true, is conditioned for the payment of the debt of the original defendants, with costs, upon their failure to prosecute their writ of error with effect. But that debt and costs are the measure only of the liability of these defendants, and are not the debts of these defendants, who can become fixed for the penalty of their recognisance only on showing the non-performance of its conditions.
The recognisance is, therefore, a distinct ground or cause of action, which must be attached, with service on them to make a plea of attachment available either in abatement or in bar.
And even had they been served the plea would be bad according the opinion of Justice Strong in Brown v. Scott, 1 P. F. Smith 862 : “ It neither abates nor bars an action (he says), and pleading it can have no other effect than giving notice of the claim of the attaching creditor, and to enable the court to mould the judgment and protect the rights of the parties.”
But this judgment must be reversed on the ground of a mistrial. When the court overruled the demurrer of the defendants to the replication of the plaintiffs to their plea of the pending foreign attachment, it left the cause standing upon immaterial issues. The plea in abatement, we have seen, was itself bad, and the replication to it, that the debt had been assigned by the plaintiff to Messrs. Brown et al, was not material to the cause.
Nor was it a material issue to the defendants that the New York attaching creditors of the Thompson Oil Company had [414]*414commenced a previous suit in Pennsylvania for their debts. The result was that the case was tried without any issuable plea on the part of these defendants; and as it was tried against their protest, entered upon the record, no presumption of waiver or acquiesence can be made against them, while the issues presented by the plaintiff’s double replication were immaterial to the case. The judgment is therefore reversed, the plea and replication thereto are stricken from the record, and a procedendo awarded.
On the return of the record by a remittitur from the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs on the 31st of October 1871, took a rule 'on the defendants to plead in fifteen days or judgment. November 10th, the defendants pleaded, “ nil debet and payment, &c.” November 29th, on leave, the defendants withdrew their plea. On the same day the defendants Noble and Lamb pleaded the attachment, &c., substantially the same plea as that pleaded before the reversal. On the 2d of January 1872, this plea was stricken off; the plea “nil debet and payment, &c.,” was same day entered by the court; and Theodore Wright, one of the defendants not served, asked to enter his appearance in the case; February 27th, leave granted to “ Wright to appear without prejudice to the rights of either party and without any right to continuance by reason of said appearance, and said defendant required to plead during this day.” On the same day the court struck off the plea of “nil debet and payment, &c.,” without consent of defendants’ attorneys. Same day Wright filed a special plea, averring that the debt had been attached by process from the Supreme Court of New York, &c., as set out in former special plea; and that in the issue directed between Tweed the receiver and the garnishees, the plaintiffs recovered a judgment of $30,334.11 against the garnishees; on which judgment and execution was issued,“by means whereof the said judgment became and was entirely satisfied.” On the same day the plea .was stricken off by the court. The case being on the trial list, March 5th 1872, judgment was on motion entered against Noble, Lamb and Wright for want of a plea, the defendants’ counsel protesting; the judgment was liquidated at “ $54,000, real debt $33,894.66.”
The defendants took out a writ of error and assigned for error:
1. Striking off the plea.
2. Entering judgment for want of a plea.
The case was heard by the Supreme Court, October 26th 1872, before Thompson, C. J., Read, Agnew, Sharswood and Williams, JJ.
G. Shiras, Jr., and G. W. Biddle, for plaintiffs in error.
J. C. Marshall and J. H. Walker, for defendants in error.
[415]*415The opinion of the court was delivered, November 4th 1872, by
The court below erred in striking off the plea in this case. In effect the plea alleged a legal recovery and satisfaction of the debt, for which the recognisors in this case were liable on their recognisance as bail in error. If Wright, the principal in the recognisance, with Snow and other defendants in the original judgments for which Noble and Lamb became liable as bail in error, paid that judgment as garnishees in an attachment of plaintiff’s debt, clearly the payment is so far a defence to the bail in error. This being the substantial averment of .the plea which the court struck off, they were precluded from any defence arising out of the alleged satisfaction of the debt for which they were liable. This is a very different thing from pleading the pending attachment in abatement or suspension of the suit against themselves before payment of the debt. As we stated when this case was here last year, the remedy of Noble and others, the only defendants in this action, ivas to pay the money into court and leave the controversy between the attaching creditors and the persons claiming by assignment prior to the service of the attachment, to be pursued between themselves. It was a contract in which Noble and Lamb then had no interest. But the subsequent payment of the debt by their principals, the defendants in the original judgment, operates as a discharge, if rightfully made. If their principals have paid it, they should not be called on to pay it a second time. The court, therefore, ought not to have stricken off the plea, but to have put the plaintiffs to their replication, in which they had a right to set up an assignment of the debt before attachment and notice thereof, to show that the payment was made by the garnishees in their own wrong. This would have raised the real question in the cause as to the effect of the judicial proceedings in New York upon the assignors, who were citizens of Pennsylvania, a question upon which it would be improper now even to intimate an opinion.
The order of the court below striking off the special pleas of Wright and the other defendants is reversed, the plea restored and procedendo awarded.