1. The proceeding by garnishment in point of law is the institution of a suit in which the creditor is permitted to proceed against the debtor of his debtor, and therefore would seem to be governed by the general rules applicable to other.suits. [Thomas v. Hopper, 5 Ala. Rep. 442.] But in the ancillary suits which grow out of the attachment laws, the proceedings, when not prescribed by the statutes must, to a great extent be adapted to the condition and relative position of the parties. [See Goodwin v. Brooks, 6 Ala. Rep. 836; Graves v. Cooper, at this term; Myatt v. Lockhart, Ib.]
2.. We may consider this suit then, as instituted by the plaintiffs in attachment, through the medium’of their debtor, against Enoch Travis, and the question arises on his answer, if a judgment could properly be rendered against him, upon the disclosure that he was indebted, as one of a partnership firm, to the defendant in attachment. The act of 1818 provides, that whenever any cause of action may exist against two or more partners, of any denomination whatever, it shall be lawful to prosecute an action against any one or more of them; and when a writ shall be issued against all the partners of a firm, service of the same upon any one of them, shall be deemed equivalent to a service on all. Here the garnishment is issued against one partner only, and therefore the .. plaintiffs must be considered as having elected to proceed against him solely, and we think it clear they were entitled to have judgment against him upon his answer; but after that was made, and before any judgment rendered upon it, his death intervened, and *577therefore the further question arises, whether the suit survives, and was properly revived against his personal representatives.
3. It will be observed the statute does profess to change the liability of partners from joint to joint„'and several; it allows the privilege of sueingeachynw’twer and provides that a service on one shall be equivalent to a service on all. As the statute neither directs that a suit, when once commenced, shall or shall not survive, we must loot to the probable intention, to be ascertained in the first instance from the act itself, and beyond it from the then existing law. As the privilege is'given the creditor, of considering the service on one as bringing all the partners before the Court, the other clause, which warrants a suit against one only, would seem to be entirely useless, unless such suit, when commenced, would survive, and might be prosecuted against the personal representatives. It is true, that by the common law, upon the death of a partner, the remedy was gone, at law, against his personal representatives, but in equity the liability was held to continue, and, it is said, could be enforced by bill, whether the survivors were solvent or otherwise. [Story on Part. 514, and cases there cited.] Indeed, in this respect, it is now recognized as the well settled doctrine, that there is no distinction between the debts due from partners, and those due from other joint debtors. In equity, all are considered as joint and. several, and the creditor may pursue the personal representative of the deceased joint debtor, or partner, whether the survivors are insolvent or otherwise. [Devaynes v. Noble, 1 Mer. 529; Story’s Eq. § 676, and cases there cited.] It is true, in Marr v. Southwick, 2 Porter, 351, it was considered by this Court, that a creditor could not pursue the personal representatives of a deceased partner, in equity, without alledging and proving the insolvency of the survivor; but it is there conceded, that if suit was commenced, under the statute, against one of a partnership, it would survive against his personal representatives. See also, as bearing on this subject Von Pheel v. Connelly, 9 Porter, 452; Trann v. Gorman, Ib. 456; Bartlett v. Lang, 2 Ala. Rep. 404; Bean v. Cabbiness, 6 Ib. 343.] The remedy at law, under the act previously cited, was further extended by an act passed in 1839, which gives the right to creditors to sue and recover their demands at law-, of the personal representative of a deceased partner, without having first prosecuted the survivor to insolvency. The act is limited by two provi-*578sos, in these terms: “ Provided, the plaintiff shall, before instituting such suit, make affidavit in writing, before the clerk of the Court, or Court itself, to be filed with the papers, that the survivor is insolvent, or unable to pay the amount, of the debt; or is beyond the jurisdiction of the Court: Provided, further, that when any such representative is sued separately, which may be done without such affidavit, no execution shall issue against such representative until an execution is bona fide run, and returned nulla bona as to the survivors.” The first proviso seems to contemplate, that when the suit is commenced against the representatives of the deceased partner, and no suit at that time is instituted against the survivor, that the affidavit is a pre-requisite; the second, that when suit is commenced separately against the representative of the deceased partner, and the survivors at the same time, the affidavit is not necessary, but no execution can be taken out until one is made. From this review of the legislation and the decisions bearing upon this subject, we come to the conclusion that a suit commenced against one partner in his life-time survives, and may be prosecuted against his personal representatives. It follows therefore, that the sci. fa. against the personal representatives in this case was proper.
4. In Robinson v. Starr, 3 Stewart, 90, it was held, that a garnishee was not discharged by the omission to take a judgment against him at the return term, no judgment having then been had against the defendant. In Leigh v. Smith, 5 Ala. Rep, 583, a judgment nunc pro tunc, was allowed a garnishee several terms after his answer. See also, Gaines v. Bierne, 3 Ala. Rep. 114; Graves v. Cooper, at this term.
It follows from these decisions, that as no judgment was entered against the garnishee, when he made his answer, it might be rendered subsequently, whether of the term it was entered, or nunc pro tunc as of the term of his answer; or at the term after-wards, when judgment was rendered against the defendant in attachment. When therefore the personal representatives were called on by sci. fa. to show cause why they should not be made parties to the proceedings, it was their privilege to show ahy cause which existed at that time, to discharge the estate which they represented. The statute of non claim' is one intended not only for the protection of the administrator, but is also for the benefit of the heirs and distributees of the decedent. [Thrash v. *579Sumwalt, 5 Ala. Rep. 13.] And it is as much a bar to a judgment to which the administrator is not made a party, or which is not presented as a claim to him, as any other demand. Until it is so presented, or until he is made a-party to the judgment, he is not chargeable with it. In Hollinger v. Holley, at this term, we considered another similar statute, and held, that even making the necessary parties, did not dispense with the necessity to file the judgment as a claim in the clerk’s 'office, when the estate was represented insolvent.
If an imperfect judgment exists against the decedent, it certainly is as much the duty of the creditor, asserting that as a claim against his estate, to present it within eighteen months, or to take the necessary measures to bring in the administrator, as if it was a perfect proceeding. The fact that the creditor has no control of the evidence of the original debt, cannot, make a distinction, because that is not what he is required to present; that is not his claim; the one which he is invested with, arises out of the proceedings instituted by him. Nor is the fact that a suit is pending, a sufficient reason to withdraw the claim from the influence of the statute. [See King v. Mosely, 5 Ala. Rep. 610.]
5. It is said, however, that this defence is not insisted on in the proper mode, as it is attempted to be .raised by the answer-of the executors, when it should have been by plea to the sci, fa. and it is, urged, ¡the answer is no part of the record, which can be looked to for the pui’pose of reversal.
The English practice is, to declare in sci, fa. upon the appearance of the party, and to this declaration the defendant pleads either in abatement or bar, as in other.suits. [2 Saund. 72 t.] But with us, the universal practice is, to consider the sci. fa. as Sufficient, without any declaration upon it. Usually, the controversy is determined upon a motion to quash, or upon a demurrer, but in some cases, such as sci. fa. against bail, or upon recognizances, pleas are usual and customary. But we do not think an answer as distinguished from a plea, is «o entirely irregular as to warrant the Court in entirely disregarding it. If the plaintiffhere wished to raise the question whether this mode of defence was proper, he should have demurred, or otherwise in some manner ■called the attention of the Court and opposite party to the defectiveness of the pleading;. As this was not done,>and as'the an*580swer contains a substantial matter of. defence, in view of the statute of non claim, the judgment cannot be sustained; but must be reversed and remanded for further proceedings.