Court Opinion

ID: 6581277
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:38:29.392905+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:17.585107
License: Public Domain

Park, C. J.
The officer who served the original writ of foreign attachment, upon which the present scire facias is founded, left at the usual place of abode of the defendant in that suit, and as the only service made upon the defendant, what purported to be a certified copy of the writ, with his doings indorsed thereon, but his signature was not attached to the document by his own hand but by that of his clerk. An executive officer can no more authorize another to perform an official act which the law requires him to perform, than a justice of the peace can delegate the performance of his judicial duties. The law requires an attestation of the copy by the officer. Webster defines the word “attest” as follows: “To bear witness to; to certify; to affirm to be true or genuine; to make a solemn declaration in words or writing to support a fact; appropriately used for the affirmation of persons in their official capacity, as to attest the truth of a writing, to attest a copy of record.” Can an officer certify by another that a document is a true copy of the original, any more than he could make oath by another to the same effect? It is clear that there was no attestation of the copy, and consequently no *250such copy as the law requires or recognizes was left with the defendant in the original'suit or at his usual place of abode. It follows therefore that no attachment of the property of the defendant was made in that case, for an important part of the attachment was the leaving with the defendant or at his usual place of abode “ a true and attested copy ” of the writ. But it is said that the defendant in that case appeared in court and answered to the proceeding, and that a legal judgment was rendered against him. But that did not attach his property. The attachment was made by the officer, if it was made at all, before the process was returned to court. The defendant could waive the formality of the service of process by appearing in court and answering to the case, but this no more created a lien' on his property to secure the judgment that might be lawfully rendered, than the acknowledgment of a debt creates a lieli on the property of „ the debtor. The waiver in such a case extends no farther than to make the judgment valid.
There is manifest error.
In this opinion Pardee and Loomis, Js., concurred.