RULE to show cause wherefore a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum should not be quashed, a writ of fieri facias having been issued in the same case and returnable with it to the present term. Judgment had been obtained by the defendant against the plaintiffs in the rule at the May Term of the Court 1859, in a capias suit brought to the preceding term, all the parties being, non-residents. In September last, the counsel for the plaintiff in the action, supposing the defendants to be resident in the State, sued out afi. fa. on the judgment, to which the sheriff made return ofnulla bona at this term, and in November following the ca.sa. was issued on the judgment, to which the sheriff returnednon est inventus, also to this term. The plaintiff in a judgment cannot regularly sue out two different writs of execution upon it at the same time; they may be taken out at the same time, but he cannot proceed to execute the second, until he has had a return of the first. A ca. sa. and a fi. fa. cannot be executed at the same time, nor the latter, until there has been a return of the former, 3 Bac. Alr. tit. Execution 707. Cov. and Hughes Dig.sec. 12, p. 653. 2 Saund. 68 d. He may haveca. sa. and fi. fa. together, but if the defendant is taken on the ca. sa., the fi. fa. will be quashed. 4Com. Dig. tit. Execution, 138. They may be issued together, but only one can be executed. Sew. Law of Shff. 46 Law Libr. 155. A plaintiff having sued out a fi. fa., may, if he chooses, omit to execute it, and take out a ca. sa. and execute that before the *Page 173 fi. fa. is returned, or is returnable; but if he executes thefi. fa., he cannot have a ca. sa., until the fi.fa. is completely executed and returned. Miller v. Parnell, 1 Eng. C. L. R. 414. He also referred to Rev. Code 402, 403. Dig. of 1829, 215, 216. 11 Vol. Del. Laws 694, repealing a portion of the act contained in the Rev. Code 402, 403, and contended that the latter had revived and restored the former act contained in the Dig. of 1829, p. 216, and that under that act, no plaintiff could sue out a ca. sa. on a judgment in this State, without first filing an affidavit of fraud against the defendant. But granting for the sake of argument that the act which you contend is repealed is still in force, then the provision requiring the affidavit of fraud applies only when the defendant is an inhabitant of this State. The old act of 1785 referred to by the counsel on the other side, is expressly and absolutely repealed and its place supplied by the provisions to be found in the Rev. Code 499, and although the latter act is itself repealed in respect to this matter by the recent act of 1859, 11 Vol. Del. Laws 694, the last mentioned act does not revive, or restore the act of 1785; but even if it did, it would have no application to this case for the reason suggested by the Chief Justice. There being then no act of Assembly on the subject, the only principles of law which apply to the case, are the principles of the common law in regard to the matter. I do not deem it necessary to controvert, nor shall I controvert the position assumed, or the authorities cited on the other side, as to the regularity of the writs issued in this case, because they cannot affect the regularity of either writ in the present instance, for the simple reason that neither the fi. fa. nor ca. sa. was in point of fact executed by the sheriff. The fi. fa. was returned nullabona and the ca. sa. non est inventus. There has consequently been nothing *Page 174 done in the case at all in conflict with the regular mode of proceeding ruled and recognized in the very authorities on which the counsel relies to set aside the ca. sa. in this case.
And of this opinion was the court, wherefore the rule was discharged.