The provisions in our act of Assembly in relation to the remedy by original attachment purport to be directed against absconding or nonresident debtors. The case set forth in section 1, Rev. Stat., ch. 6, is "that a person indebted" hath removed or is removing himself out of the county privately, or so conceals himself that the ordinary process of law cannot be served on "such debtor." That provided for in the second is, when a 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 or resident of this State. The cases referred to in the 13th are those where by law a justice hath jurisdiction, and complaint is made on oath that any person hath removed or is removing himself out of the county privately, or so absconds or conceals himself that the ordinary process of law cannot be served "on such debtor," or that "such debtor" is an inhabitant of another government. It is true that where these sections prescribe the oath in regard to the existence and extent of the debt, they use the terms "debt or demand"; but it would seem clear that these are regarded as expressing claims of the same kind, for in the form of the attachment given in section 4 it is recited that, "A. B. (or A. B., agent, attorney or factor of C. D.) hath complained on oath that E. F. is justlyindebted to him (or the said C. D.) the amount of, etc.," and the mandate is to attach so much of the estate of the said E. F. as shall be of value sufficient "to *Page 215 satisfy the said debt and costs." Now, neither in common parlance nor in legal proceedings is a mere wrongdoer designated as a debtor, nor his responsibility for the wrong classed under the denomination of debts. Debts are the creatures of contract, and the language of these acts must be exceedingly strained to bring within their operation claims arising not from contract, but from tort.
We are all convinced that cases not of contract were not intended to be embraced within these enactments. It is manifest that the debts or demands contemplated were supposed capable of being ascertained with such precision that the amount due thereon could be verified by the oath of "the plaintiff, his agent, attorney or factor." It would be not a little absurd to suppose that the plaintiff should be required to (280) swear to the amount due him because of an assault, or of defamatory words, or of a malicious prosecution, or any other personal injury which is incapable of being weighed in pecuniary scales; but we can scarcely think with gravity of "his agent, attorney or factor" being received to state the account and swear to the true sum due thereon. Besides, if we must understand the term debtor, when describing the object of the attachment, sufficiently comprehensive to take in all persons against whom civil suit may be instituted, how can we refuse to give the same meaning to the same term in the same statute, where the debtors of the defendant are directed to be summoned to answer for what may be due from them to the defendant? He who has committed a wrong is, in the eye of reason, just as well qualified as he who has received it, to declare on oath the just amount of compensation due therefor; and if those who have violated the plaintiff's rights are his debtors, so those who have violated the personal rights of the defendant are his debtors also. We believe, however, no one has yet thought that a garnishee was to answer for historts against the defendant.
The present case does not require of us to say whether a judicial attachment founded upon a return of non est inventus to an original writ sued out against the defendant will lie in a case not arising on contract (see Rev. Stat., ch. 31, sec. 56, and ch. 6, sec. 12); and therefore we forbear from expressing any opinion upon it.
The attachment was not a proper process to be sued out by the plaintiff in this case, and the writ ought to be quashed.
PER CURIAM. Reversed.
Overruled: Maxwell v. McBrayer, 61 N.C. 528, 529. *Page 216
(281)