This action was commenced on 30 December, 1911, returnable on 30 January, 1912, to recover the sum of $67, due by account, with interest. At the same time a warrant of attachment was issued, returnable on the same day as the summons, and on the return day judgment was rendered by said justice, for the sum of $70.35, interests and costs.
On 1 February, 1912, a notice was issued to the Drexel Furniture Company to show cause on 3 February, 1912, why the conditional judgment rendered against it should not be made absolute, and to answer an oath what was due from it to the Cedar Cove Lumber Company, the defendant.
The furniture company appeared in answer to the notice, and at the same time the lumber company entered a special appearance, and moved the court to set aside the judgment rendered in the action and to vacate the attachment issued and to dismiss the action upon the following grounds:
(1) That no proper undertaking on the part of the plaintiff, (558) with sufficient surety, conditioned as provided by section 763 of the Revisal of 1905, was required or taken by the justice's court before issuing the warrant of attachment therein as required by said section.
(2) That there has been no proper publication of the summons and warrant of attachment herein, as required by section 776 of the said Revisal.
The said justice having found as a fact that by oversight and mistake, R. R. Boger, the surety on the attachment bond or undertaking, had signed the verification of said bond or undertaking, but had failed to sign the bond or undertaking itself, made the order denying the motion of the Cedar Cove Lumber Company to vacate the attachment and dismiss the action, and allowed the said R. R. Boger to sign as surety on said bond or undertaking, on said 8 February, 1912; and the said Cedar Cove Lumber Company, having excepted, appealed to the Superior Court.
The appeal was heard at the December Term, 1913, of the Superior Court, and the Cedar Cove Lumber Company again put in a special appearance and renewed the motion to vacate the attachment and dismiss the action made before the justice.
The court, upon appeal, found as a fact that proper advertisement of the attachment proceedings, when issued before the justice of the peace, *Page 490 was made, and notice relative to same posted and given as the law directs; that the justice of the peace had the right and power under the statute to allow the said Boger to sign the bond at the time he did sign it, and that it was a mere inadvertence on the part of Boger not signing the bond in the proper place at the time the attachment proceedings were issued; that at the time the said Boger verified the said bond it was his intention to sign the bond at the proper place, and he really thought he had done so.
The motion of the defendant was denied, and it excepted.
Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. His Honor has found as a fact that the summons and warrant of attachment have been duly served, and there is no exception to the finding.
The only irregularity, therefore, in the proceeding is that the surety on the undertaking of the plaintiff signed his name to the justification of the undertaking instead of the undertaking itself, and as to this his Honor finds that it was the result of a mistake, and that it was the intention of the surety to sign the undertaking, and he thought he had done so.
The statute (Rev., sec. 763) directs the officer issuing a warrant of attachment to "require a written undertaking on the part of the plaintiff, with sufficient surety," but it fails to prescribe any rule as to its execution, and a signing and delivery would be sufficient.
The authorities make a distinction between statutes requiring instruments to be signed and those requiring them to be subscribed, holding with practical unanimity in reference to the first class that it is not necessary for the name to appear on any particular part of the instrument, if written with the intent to become bound; and as to the second class, that the name must be at the end of the instrument.
In Richards v. Lumber Co., 158 N.C. 56, dealing with this question, the Court said: "It is well settled in this state that when a signature is essential to the validity of an instrument it is not necessary that the signature appear at the end unless the statute uses the word "subscribe.'Devereaux v. McMahan, 108 N.C. 134. This has always been ruled in this State in regard to wills, as to which the signature may appear anywhere. If this is true of a `signature,' it must also be true of the *Page 491 word `countersign.' It has been often held that the place of signing is a matter of taste. Adams v. Field, 21 Vt. 264; 36 Cyc., 441."
We are therefore of opinion that the surety signed the undertaking when it was first filed, and that it was then valid and binding on him.
We are further of opinion that if invalid, the court had the (560) power to permit it to be filed afterwards. Pharr v. Commissioners,ante, 523.
Affirmed.
Cited: Peace v. Edwards, 170 N.C. 66 (2g); Alexander v. Johnston,171 N.C. 471 (2g); Keith v. Bailey, 185 N.C. 263 (2c); S. v. Abernethy, 190 N.C. 770 (2g); Corporation Com. v. Wilkinson, 201 N.C. 348 (2g).