MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
MURRAY, District Judge.
This is an action brought by a California citizen against her former husband and trustees of a trust corpus located in Boston.1 Plaintiff’s former husband is one of the trustees, and is a citizen of Texas. The other trustees are a citizen of Colorado and a national banking association with its principal place of business in Boston (“the Bank”). The action was commenced by service of a summons, complaint and trustee writ on defendant Bank.
I. Introduction
Plaintiff’s complaint alleges that her former husband, Ames Nowell, owes her money on an unsatisfied judgment recovered in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (Count I), and owes her the costs of appeal from that judgment in the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (Count II). The complaint further alleges that Ames Nowell owes her money under a separation agreement in writing, or, alternatively, under the terms of a Mexican divorce decree which incorporated the separation agreement as part of the decree of the Mexican court; that he intends never to pay plaintiff any sums payable to her under such agreement or under such divorce decree; and that the obligation of Ames Nowell to pay plaintiff money at fixed times under such agreement or such divorce decree is continuing and is now in full force and effect (Count III). The complaint further alleges that Ames Nowell “is presently the only beneficiary of [the trust held by the Bank] * * * entitled to receive payments of income therefrom, and such income payments are mandatory”. Thus, plaintiff seeks in this action (1) to satisfy her claims against her former husband for money due and owing her by applying the income payments now due him under the trust and seized by the trustee process; (2) to impress an equitable charge or lien upon future income payable to him to secure any present indebtedness and future payments which may become due her under the separation agreement or Mexican divorce decree; [642]*642and (3) specific performance of the separation agreement or Mexican divorce decree.
Plaintiff has moved for leave to amend and to amend her complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a), and these motions have been granted. By order dated April 17, 1968, this court dismissed the original complaint, finding:
(1) that plaintiff has not shown that the action is between citizens of different states, and
(2) that jurisdiction over the defendants is not obtained by the procedure invoked by the plaintiff * * *
Prior to entering its order, the court heard argument on the various grounds urged by defendant Bank. In addition, argument was heard on the Bank’s motion to quash the trustee writ. At no time in these proceedings have the individual defendants appeared, and, for all that shows on the papers before the court, no notice has been given them concerning this proceeding. Since the matter has been fully argued previously, the motion to dismiss is treated as a renewed attack upon the amended complaint. Consideration will also be given to the Bank’s motion to quash the trustee process issued in this case. This motion is also treated as if it was renewed here. At the outset, however, it seems clear from plaintiff’s motion to amend that she has cured the Bank’s objections to the allegations in her original complaint concerning the citizenship of defendant Ames Nowell. It is now alleged that Ames Nowell is a citizen of Texas, while previously plaintiff claimed only that he was “of parts unknown”. Thus, the first reason supporting this court’s former order of dismissal can no longer stand.
Another preliminary matter may be summarily disposed of. The Bank objected to the original complaint on the ground that it did not join as a defendant the third trustee of the trust involved. In plaintiff’s amended complaint, Lawrence Ames Nowell has been named as a party defendant. By affidavit dated February 26, 1968, the Bank stated that it, Ames Nowell, and Lawrence Ames Nowell are the present trustees of the trust. It follows there can be no objection to the complaint on the ground that it fails to name indispensable parties to the lawsuit. Whether the absent trustees can be served with process in this case is a different question, and it will be taken up later.2
II. Plaintiff’s Choice of Forum
A. The Foreign Judgment Registration Statute
As to other questions raised, it is important to point out what this action does not involve. It is not an ancillary execution proceeding on a judgment recovered in another federal district court and registered here. While 28 U.S.C. § 1963 (1964) provides that such a judgment “shall have the same effect as a judgment” recovered here and “may be enforced in like manner”, it is not alleged that the Texas judgment has been registered as required by that section, and no copy of that judgment is presently before the court that could be deemed “registered”. Plaintiff has chosen not to follow the section 1963 registration procedure, and this case cannot be viewed as one arising under that section. Rather, that part of plaintiff’s complaint seeking recovery on her Texas judgment must be considered a new and independent proceeding.3
B. Subject-Matter and Personal Jurisdiction Generally
There is no question in this action concerning the subject-matter jurisdiction of the court. This is a controversy between citizens of different states, and, under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (1) (1964), the court has jurisdiction [643]*643over the dispute between the parties.4 Since the plaintiff’s former husband, Ames Nowell, is a non-resident, however, the question posed is whether this court is authorized by statute or rule, considering the allegations in the complaint, as amended, to affect his interest in property located within the District of Massachusetts.5 This court has no in personam jurisdiction over the defendant, and no long-arm statute is applicable to this case. The plaintiff requests, however, that the court order her former husband “to appear or plead by a day certain” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1655 (1964).
C. Venue
The statute from which section 1655 was derived has been the subject of many judicial constructions. It has received due notice from commentators.6 In 1875 it was re-enacted as part of an act prescribing the venue requirements for actions in the United States Courts.7 The first part of that venue act, as modified over the years, is now 28 U.S.C. § 1391 (Supp. III 1967). Relevant is subsection (a) of that section, which reads as follows:
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MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
MURRAY, District Judge.
This is an action brought by a California citizen against her former husband and trustees of a trust corpus located in Boston.1 Plaintiff’s former husband is one of the trustees, and is a citizen of Texas. The other trustees are a citizen of Colorado and a national banking association with its principal place of business in Boston (“the Bank”). The action was commenced by service of a summons, complaint and trustee writ on defendant Bank.
I. Introduction
Plaintiff’s complaint alleges that her former husband, Ames Nowell, owes her money on an unsatisfied judgment recovered in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (Count I), and owes her the costs of appeal from that judgment in the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (Count II). The complaint further alleges that Ames Nowell owes her money under a separation agreement in writing, or, alternatively, under the terms of a Mexican divorce decree which incorporated the separation agreement as part of the decree of the Mexican court; that he intends never to pay plaintiff any sums payable to her under such agreement or under such divorce decree; and that the obligation of Ames Nowell to pay plaintiff money at fixed times under such agreement or such divorce decree is continuing and is now in full force and effect (Count III). The complaint further alleges that Ames Nowell “is presently the only beneficiary of [the trust held by the Bank] * * * entitled to receive payments of income therefrom, and such income payments are mandatory”. Thus, plaintiff seeks in this action (1) to satisfy her claims against her former husband for money due and owing her by applying the income payments now due him under the trust and seized by the trustee process; (2) to impress an equitable charge or lien upon future income payable to him to secure any present indebtedness and future payments which may become due her under the separation agreement or Mexican divorce decree; [642]*642and (3) specific performance of the separation agreement or Mexican divorce decree.
Plaintiff has moved for leave to amend and to amend her complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a), and these motions have been granted. By order dated April 17, 1968, this court dismissed the original complaint, finding:
(1) that plaintiff has not shown that the action is between citizens of different states, and
(2) that jurisdiction over the defendants is not obtained by the procedure invoked by the plaintiff * * *
Prior to entering its order, the court heard argument on the various grounds urged by defendant Bank. In addition, argument was heard on the Bank’s motion to quash the trustee writ. At no time in these proceedings have the individual defendants appeared, and, for all that shows on the papers before the court, no notice has been given them concerning this proceeding. Since the matter has been fully argued previously, the motion to dismiss is treated as a renewed attack upon the amended complaint. Consideration will also be given to the Bank’s motion to quash the trustee process issued in this case. This motion is also treated as if it was renewed here. At the outset, however, it seems clear from plaintiff’s motion to amend that she has cured the Bank’s objections to the allegations in her original complaint concerning the citizenship of defendant Ames Nowell. It is now alleged that Ames Nowell is a citizen of Texas, while previously plaintiff claimed only that he was “of parts unknown”. Thus, the first reason supporting this court’s former order of dismissal can no longer stand.
Another preliminary matter may be summarily disposed of. The Bank objected to the original complaint on the ground that it did not join as a defendant the third trustee of the trust involved. In plaintiff’s amended complaint, Lawrence Ames Nowell has been named as a party defendant. By affidavit dated February 26, 1968, the Bank stated that it, Ames Nowell, and Lawrence Ames Nowell are the present trustees of the trust. It follows there can be no objection to the complaint on the ground that it fails to name indispensable parties to the lawsuit. Whether the absent trustees can be served with process in this case is a different question, and it will be taken up later.2
II. Plaintiff’s Choice of Forum
A. The Foreign Judgment Registration Statute
As to other questions raised, it is important to point out what this action does not involve. It is not an ancillary execution proceeding on a judgment recovered in another federal district court and registered here. While 28 U.S.C. § 1963 (1964) provides that such a judgment “shall have the same effect as a judgment” recovered here and “may be enforced in like manner”, it is not alleged that the Texas judgment has been registered as required by that section, and no copy of that judgment is presently before the court that could be deemed “registered”. Plaintiff has chosen not to follow the section 1963 registration procedure, and this case cannot be viewed as one arising under that section. Rather, that part of plaintiff’s complaint seeking recovery on her Texas judgment must be considered a new and independent proceeding.3
B. Subject-Matter and Personal Jurisdiction Generally
There is no question in this action concerning the subject-matter jurisdiction of the court. This is a controversy between citizens of different states, and, under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (1) (1964), the court has jurisdiction [643]*643over the dispute between the parties.4 Since the plaintiff’s former husband, Ames Nowell, is a non-resident, however, the question posed is whether this court is authorized by statute or rule, considering the allegations in the complaint, as amended, to affect his interest in property located within the District of Massachusetts.5 This court has no in personam jurisdiction over the defendant, and no long-arm statute is applicable to this case. The plaintiff requests, however, that the court order her former husband “to appear or plead by a day certain” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1655 (1964).
C. Venue
The statute from which section 1655 was derived has been the subject of many judicial constructions. It has received due notice from commentators.6 In 1875 it was re-enacted as part of an act prescribing the venue requirements for actions in the United States Courts.7 The first part of that venue act, as modified over the years, is now 28 U.S.C. § 1391 (Supp. III 1967). Relevant is subsection (a) of that section, which reads as follows:
A civil action wherein jurisdiction is founded only on diversity of citizenship may, except as otherwise provided by law, be brought only in the judicial district where all plaintiffs or all defendants reside, or in which the claim arose.
A series of cases,8 including an 1894 Supreme Court decision,9 have held that the general venue requirements now contained in section 1391(a) are not applicable to actions properly within section [644]*6441655. Thus, since plaintiff is a citizen of California and her former husband, the defendant Ames Nowell, is a citizen of Texas, venue is proper in this district if this case falls within section 1655. On the other hand, venue is improper if it is to be determined solely by reference to section 1391(a).
D. Service of Process under Rule 4 (e)
Prior to the 1963 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, it had been consistently held that a civil action originally brought in a district court could not be commenced by attachment.10 In 1963, however, Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure was amended to provide in relevant part as follows:
******
Whenever a statute or rule of court of the state in which the district court is held provides * * * for service upon or notice to * * * [a party not an inhabitant of or found within the state] to appear and respond or defend in an action by reason of the attachment or garnishment or similar seizure of his property located within the state, service may * * * be made under the circumstances and in the manner prescribed in the statute or rule.11
Together with a complementary change in Rule 4(f),12 this amendment permits the commencement of an original action by trustee process.13 Rule 82 provides, however, that “[t]hese rules shall not be construed to extend or limit the jurisdiction of the United States district courts or the venue of actions therein”. The restriction imposed by section 1391(a) must limit the venue of actions commenced under Rule 4(e) because of the injunctive language of Rule 82. Manifestly, this limitation was not unforeseen by the Advisory Committee on Rules for Civil Procedure. The Committee’s Notes to amended Rule 4(e) state categorically that “[t]he necessity of satisfying subject-matter jurisdictional requirements and requirements of venue will limit the practical utilization of these methods of effecting service”.14
[645]*645E. Notice to “Appear or Plead” under 28 U.S.C. § 1655: The Pre-Existing Lien Rule
The question presented for decision in view of plaintiff’s request that notice issued to defendant pursuant to section 1655 is whether this action on a judgment and a separation agreement or divorce decree is “an action * * * to enforce * * * [a] lien upon or claim to * * * personal property within the district * * 28 U.S.C. § 1655 (1964). Defendant Bank’s motion to dismiss is grounded in part on the contention that this is not such an action and therefore the District of Massachusetts does not provide proper venue. Plaintiff’s complaint is construed to allege that there is personal property within the district;' and, thus, it is necessary to determine only whether this is “an action * * * to enforce * * * [a] lien upon or claim to * * * personal property * *
Several decisions15 and the opinions of commentators16 indicate that the claim or lien must exist before the commencement of an action under section 1655 and it also must relate to specific property.17 The rationale for this result is probably the notion that a plaintiff, having staked out a property right in a specific res some time prior to the commencement of his action, ought to be able to litigate where his stake is located. Plaintiff’s interest is usually the result of a consensual transaction with the defendant 18 or the result of an instrument [646]*646under which both parties possess an interest in the same res.19
Applying the foregoing to the facts of this case, plaintiff had no lien on or claim to the interest of defendant Ames Nowell in the Boston trust corpus prior to the commencement of this action. Thus, it would appear that this action was improperly commenced under section 1655. Plaintiff, however, urges that there are cases which support service of process under section 1655 on the facts present here,20 and, accordingly, they should be carefully scrutinized.
In Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States v. United States, 331 F.2d 29 (1st Cir. 1964), an action was brought by the United States to enforce a tax lien against endowment policies under which the taxpayer was the beneficiary. Substituted service was made on the absent taxpayer pursuant to section 1655. The main controversy in the case centered on whether the defendant’s interest in the policies constituted “personal property” within the meaning of section 1655. It was not argued that the government’s tax lien did not amount to a “lien” or “claim” under section 1655. Nevertheless, such a determination is implicit in the court’s decision. The government’s tax lien existed prior to the commencement of the lawsuit.21 That, of course, is not the case here. The lien involved in Equitable Life was created by section 6321 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, which provides as follows:
If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount * * * shall be a lien in favor of the United States upon all property and rights to property, whether real or personal, belonging to such person.
Thus, while the government’s lien was pre-existing, it did not relate to specific property, and the government’s claim for taxes bore no particular relation to the property located in the jurisdiction where suit was brought. Even so, the case remains distinguishable from the situation here. The district court in Equitable Life 22 justified the bringing of that action in this district as follows:
28 U.S.C. § 1391(c), providing that ‘A corporation may be sued in any judicial district in which it is * * * licensed to do business’, applies to a suit against -'Equitable [the garnishee], which is licensed to do business in Massachusetts. 28 U.S.C. § 1396, providing that ‘Any civil action for the collection of internal revenue taxes may be brought in the district where the liability for such tax accrues, in the district of the taxpayer’s residence, or in the district where the return was filed,’ applies to this action for the collection of internal revenue taxes due from Brody [the absent defendant] whose liability for tax accrued in Massachusetts and who filed his tax here.
213 F.Supp. at 907. In affirming, the Court of Appeals noted that “[i]t is not claimed that Brody was domiciled * * * [in the District of Massachusetts], but his returns had been filed there, which may have suggested this selection [the [647]*647selection of the District of Massachusetts as the court in which the action was brought]. See 28 U.S.C. § 1396.” 331 F.2d at 31. Thus, there was an alternative statutory basis for venue apart from section 1655. No such alternative basis is available in this action.23 Other reasons can be advanced to distinguish the two cases. It can be argued that the public’s interest in the collection of taxes due the government, as fortified by the blanket lien afforded by section 6321 of the 1954 Code, outweighs any inconvenience to an absent defendant when that lien is enforced under section 1655. In addition, a district (Court is apparently the only forum open to the government when it wants to enforce a tax lien.24 In the case at bar, however, plaintiff would appear to have a state forum.25
Plaintiff also relies on Huntress v. Estate of Huntress, 235 F.2d 205, 61 A.L.R.2d 682 (7th Cir. 1956), as support for her argument that this case is properly within section 1655.26 In Huntress, plaintiff, a citizen of Illinois, brought suit in the United States District Court in Illinois against an Illinois bank and insurance company, the estate of her deceased former husband, and her former husband’s second wife. The bank and insurance company were alleged to hold property of the deceased with a situs in Illinois. The second wife was a citizen of New York, and the former husband’s estate had a situs outside Illinois, perhaps in New York. Defendant second wife appeared generally, and no jurisdictional problems were posed with respect to the Illinois defendants.27 The trial court dismissed the action.28 The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 18(b) permits a plaintiff to bring one action to establish a debt and to reach property in the hands of others, despite the fact that Illinois [648]*648procedure would require two separate actions. The court also held that section 1655 was available to make service on the absent estate.29 That would be the equivalent here of a similar holding concerning service under section 1655 on the absent debtor, plaintiff’s former husband Ames Nowell. The action in Huntress was for breach of promises contained in a separation agreement — an action similar to one of the claims presented here. As such, there was no pre-existing lien or claim.
The Huntress court relies exclusively on its opinion in Graff v. Nieberg, 233 F.2d 860 (7th Cir. 1956) 30 for its conclusion that service under section 1655 is appropriate. Considering that the preexisting lien requirement embodies significant policies of fairness and convenience to absent defendants in actions brought in the federal courts, this court is of the opinion that Huntress and Graff should not be followed.
Plaintiff urges Spellman v. Sullivan, 43 F.2d 762 (S.D.N.Y.1930), reversed on other grounds, 61 F.2d 787 (2d Cir. 1932), as support for her contention that service under section 1655 is proper at least for that part of her action based on a judgment recovered in a Texas federal district court. Spellman involved a creditor’s bill to reach equitable assets of the defendant judgment debtor located in the Southern District of New York, the district where the bill was brought. Plaintiff was a citizen of Missouri and defendant was a citizen of New Jersey. Plaintiff had previously obtained the judgment against the defendant in the same court, and in that action the court had acquired personal jurisdiction over the defendant (61 F.2d at 788). In prosecuting the creditor’s bill, plaintiff [649]*649obtained an order for service by publication on the defendant pursuant to the statutory predecessor of section 1655. Defendant’s motion to vacate that order was denied on the ground that a judgment creditor’s bill constituted an “equitable lien or claim” (43 F.2d at 764) on the property involved within the meaning of the statute.
The district court in Spellman distinguished the case before it from most of those previously decided under the statute on the ground that the latter did not involve a claim or lien upon which a judgment had been recovered. The court emphasized that a judgment creditor’s bill was available under New York law only when a judgment had been recovered and execution on it had been returned unsatisfied. The court found that the filing of a judgment creditor’s bill under both New York law and federal equity practice creates a lien on the judgment debt- or’s equitable assets. In justifying any supposed departure from the line of cases requiring a pre-existing claim or lien, the court noted:—
If the [pre-existing lien] rule mentioned in these cases is a sound one and is applicable, no creditor’s bill can be maintained except where the judgment debtor remains available for service within the district. The court may render a judgment in favor of the creditor on the merits, and execution may be returned unsatisfied. The judgment debtor may have equitable assets of considerable value located in the district. But we are told that the judgment debtor, by removing from the district and staying out of it, can baffle the judgment creditor and render the court powerless to enforce its own judgment. That is the very situation in the instant case. If this argument is tenable, it is a reproach to our system of administering justice.
The Court of Appeals agreed with the district court on the question of service under the predecessor of section 1655 “[f]or the reasons sufficiently stated” (61 F.2d at 788) by the district judge.
The lien of the trustee process under the Massachusetts practice and that created by filing the creditor’s bill in Spell-man are both still tied to commencement of the action; they have no separate existence. Thus Spellman would appear to represent a marked departure from the pre-existing lien requirement.31 The decision, however, can be reconciled with the prior law. In reaching its decision, the district court in Spellman distinguished Shainwald v. Lewis, 5 F. 510 (D.Nev.1880) — a case holding service under a predecessor of section 1655 improper— as a decision involving an attempt to enforce the judgment of another district court. The district court in Spellman, however, was confronted with a bill to enforce its own judgment; and since personal jurisdiction over the defendant had been secured in the earlier proceedings, that fact can be taken as satisfying the contact contemplated by the pre-existing lien requirement between the absent defendant and the jurisdiction where his property is located.
In any event, it does not follow that the course followed in Spellman is appropriate today. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted after the Spellman decision, if plaintiff here had recovered a judgment in this district, she could utilize trustee process to reach defendant’s interest in the Massachusetts trust pursuant to Federal Rule 69. While this question has not been argued, it would appear that the same process would be available to plaintiff if she had first registered her Texas federal district court judgment here because another post-Spellman statute provides that the judgment of another district court shall, if registered, “have the same effect as a judgment” recovered here and “may be enforced in like manner”. 28 U.S.C. § 1963. With these significant changes there would seem to be no reason why Spellman’s application of section 1655 should be given effect here. Of [650]*650course, it cannot be contended that Spellman is of any help to plaintiff in her claim based on a separation agreement or divorce decree.
III. Conclusion
The other decision relied on by the plaintiff, Franz v. Buder, 11 F.2d 854 (8th Cir. 1926), cert. denied, 273 U.S. 756, 47 S.Ct. 459, 71 L.Ed. 876 (1927), falls within the pre-existing lien rule which this court adopts for the matter now before it.32 No other decision, statute,33 or rule found by the court justifies service of process under section 1655 on the facts of this case.34
The previous order of dismissal entered did not expressly quash the trustee writ that was issued; but since none of plaintiff’s claims may be brought in this court, for the reasons stated, the motion to quash has been allowed.