Case Name: JOHN KINCAID v. THOMAS W. FRANCIS, Adm'r of Robert Thomas
Court: Supreme Court of Errors and Appeals of Tennessee
Jurisdiction: Tennessee
Decision Date: 1812
Citations: 1 Cooke 48
Docket Number: 
Parties: JOHN KINCAID v. THOMAS W. FRANCIS, Adm'r of Robert Thomas.
Judges: 
Reporter: Tennessee Reports
Volume: 3
Pages: 36–40

Head Matter:
Nashville.
1812.
JOHN KINCAID v. THOMAS W. FRANCIS, Adm'r of Robert Thomas.
-| Adjourned Case from the Davidson Circuit f Court.
The original attachment and affidavit are, like other leading process, parts of the record, and, in pleading to them, oyer need not be craved. [See Carter v. Vaulx, 2 Sw. 640, where this case is cited.]
To sustain an original attachment, one of the parties must be a resident of the State. [Acc. Webb v. Lea, 6 Y. 473; 3 Hum. 690; Meigs, 207, note. But changed by statute. Hills ®. Eazelle, 6 Sn. 363. Code, 3455.]
This provision of our attachment laws is not in conflict with'* the Constitution of the United States, Art. IV. § 2, which provides that citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens of the several States.
That clause of the Constitution was probably intended to compel the general government to extend the same privileges and immunities to the citizens of every State.
Kincaid sued out an original attachment against Thomas, who was not an inhabitant of Tennessee, in his lifetime; and upon a garnishee being summoned, filed his declaration in debt, in the usual form, for $ 117.60. After this, Thomas died, and letters of administration were granted to Thomas "W". Francis. A scire facias was then sued out against Francis, to revive the suit; to which he appeared and pleaded in abatement that the plaintiff was not an inhabitant of Tennessee, but resided in Pennsylvania. The question in this Court was, whether a citizen of Pennsylvania could commence a suit, by original attachment, against another citizen of Pennsylvania, in the courts of this State.
The cause was argued at the last term by Dickinson, for the plaintiff, and Whiteside, for the defendant; and at this term by Beck, for the plaintiff, and Whiteside, for the defendant.
For the defendant, it was argued that the act of Assembly of this State, authorizing original attachments to be issued, only applied to cases where one of. the parties was not an inhabitant of Tennessee. The statute, Hay. Rev. 183, § 21, provides, “that when any person, who shall be an inhabitant of any other government, so that he cannot be personally served with process, shall be indebted to any person, resident of this State, and hath any estate within the same, any of the judges, or justices may grant an attachment against the estate of such foreign person : And in case of the death of any debtor residing without the limits of this State, the creditor, resident within the State, shall in like manner be entitled to recover, by attachment, against the executor or administrator of such non-resident.” From this it was argued that the right to sue out an original attachment under this clause could never exist, except where the plaintiff was a resident of Tennessee, and the defendant a citizen of some other State. The original attachment, it was also said, was a new remedy, depending solely upon the statute for its existence; and therefore the plaintiff should, in every case, show that he was within its provisions, or he would not be benefited by it.
For the plaintiff, it was argued that the distinctions in the statute, drawn between citizens of this State and citizens of any other State, were against the Constitution of the United States ; for by that it is provided, art. 4, § 2, “ that the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States.” And that, therefore, the legislature of Tennessee were not authorized to pass any statute showing a favor to her own citizens not extended to the citizens of any other State.
It was also argued that this Court could not judicially know the defendant was not a citizen of Tennessee; because, although it appeared so in the original attachment, yet that this was not necessarily a part of the record ; and'as oyer had not been craved of it, that the Court could not now look into it; and it was very clear that if either of the parties was an inhabitant of this State, the remedy, by original attachment, was well settled, as would appear by another clause in the same statute.

Opinion:
Overton, J.
To the plea in abatement, filed by the defendant, there is a demurrer, which must be overruled. The act of Assembly is plain, express, and cannot be misunderstood; it evidently limits the commencing of a suit, by original attachment, to citizens of this State, or against citizens of this State ; and never can operate where both parties are non-residents. The Constitution of the United Stales is not incompatible with this act of Assembly. The object of the Constitution was to secure to the citizens of every State an equal administration of justice as it regarded their essential rights, either of property or person, by the courts of every State ; and was not at all intended to interfere with the mode of prosecuting those rights. This seems to have been the understanding of several States, as some of them have passed such discriminating laws: for instance, in Kentucky, a non-resident is compelled to give security for costs before he can commence a suit of any description; whereas, the citizens of the State are under no such necessity. The constitutionality of such laws has not been questioned by any adjudicated case within my knowledge.