Eerguson brought suit against W. F. Moore on an account, and sued out an attachment on the Alleged ground that Moore was about to sell his property with the intent to defraud his creditors. The constable levied the order of attachment on certain property of Moore, who caused a bond to be executed to Ferguson by H. E. Clidewell, as surety, to the effect that Moore would perform the judgment of the court. The bond was approved and the property released. Moore filed an affidavit denying the statement of the affidavit of plaintiff upon which the attachment was issued. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against defendant on the account, and the attachment was ordered to be discharged. Eerguson then brought this action against Glidewell on the bond executed by him for the amount of the judgment recovered against Moore. Glidewell answered, setting up the order discharging the attachment as his defense. Judgment was rendered in favor of Glidewell, and Eerguson appealed.
Effect of discharge,
The only question in the case is, did the order of the court discharging the attachment release Glidewell from the obligation of his bond? This question has not been before this court since the adoption of the Code, but it is sometimes insisted that it did arise under prior statutes of this state, which were the legal equivalent of the statute under which the bond sued on was executed, and that this court decided it in the affirmative in Delano v. Kennedy, 5 Ark., 455; Childress v. Fowler, 9 Ark., 159; and Wood v. Carlton, 26 Ark, 662.
The statutes of this state prior to the Code provided that suits at law by attachment might be commenced in any of the circuit courts of this state by filing in the office of the clerk of such court a declaration, petition, or statement in writing, setting forth the plaintiff’s cause of action, an affidavit setting forth grounds of attachment, and a bond to'the defendant, with sufficient security, to the effect that plaintiff will prove his debt or demand on a trial at law, or that he will pay such damages as shall be adjudged against him, and by suing out a writ of attachment against the property of defendant; that the defendant, at the time of the service of the writ of attachment, or at any time before judgment shall be rendered against him, might file a bond, “ conditioned that he will appear to and answer the plaintiff’’s demand at such time and place as by law he should, and that he will pay and abide the judgment of the court, or that his surety will do the same for him;” and that when the defendant should file such bond, as required by law, the attachment should be released and the suit proceed as other suits at law. This court held that the proceeding authorized by these statutes was, in its intention, a compound proceeding, combining a proceeding in rem with a proceeding in personam, each having a distinct identity, but liable to be transformed, at any time before final judgment, into a proceeding solely in personam, and, as a whole, was founded upon the declaration, bond, affidavit and writ in harmonious combination; and that should this foundation be defective, as it would be in case the affidavit, the bond, or the writ should not be in conformity with the statute, or either should vary, the one from the other, in so much as to disturb the harmony of the whole as one suit, the entire proceedings, if appropriately assailed, would necessarily fail. It further held, that the object of these statutes was to obtain jurisdiction of the person of the defendant; that the bond which the defendant was authorized by these statutes to execute to secure the release of his property was essentially an instrument of bail, which accomplished substantially all the ends that were accomplished at common law by the taking of the bail bond below, together with the subsequent filing, entering and perfection of bail to the action above; that when a defendant in an action of attachment executed such a bond he did nothing more than a defendant did in England in an ordinary action, when he first executed a bail bond below to the sheriff and subsequently appeared, as he had covenanted to do, and entered into a recognizance of special bail to the action above, and perfected appearance there by the justification of his bail; that the bail bond below to the sheriff, and the recognizance of special bail to the action above, did not have the effect, at common law, of cutting off’ any of the defenses of the defendant; and that, therefore, the execution of the bond by the defendant for the purpose of discharging the attachment, under the statutes referred to, did not impair any of. the defendant’s rights of defense, and that after its execution, he might defend the action either by plea in abatement, interposed in apt time and in due form, or by plea in bar, in the same manner, in every respect, as if he had not executed the bond, and had suffered the property attached to remain in the hands of the sheriff. Childress v. Fowler, supra.
But the Code has made radical changes in the pleading and practice in the courts of this state. The bond and affidavit made by the plaintiff to secure an attachment, and the writ of attachment, no longer form a part of the original proceedings by which an action at law may be commenced. Under the Code, attachment is a provisional remedy and merely ancillary to the action in which it is sued out. Its object, as expressly defined by the Code, is to secure the satisfaction of such judgment as may be recovered by the plaintiff. The bond the defendant is authorized to give to dissolve an attachment no longer fills the office of a bail bond at common law. It does not bind him to appear to and answer the plaintiff'’s demand at such time and place as by law he should, as it did under the former statute. The rules-of construction heretofore followed by this court, in passing upon the effect of a bond of the defendant to dissolve an attachment upon his right to attack the attachment proceedings, are not, therefore, applicable to a dissolution bond executed under the Code, the reason having ceased to exist.
The bond sued on was executed under seetion 337, of Mansfield’s Digest, which reads as follows:
“If the defendant, at any time before judgment, causes a bond to be executed to the plaintiff by one or more sufficient sureties, to be approved by the court, to the effect that defendant shall perform the judgment of the court, the attachment shall be discharged, and restitution made of any property taken under it, or the proceeds thereof.”
In construing statutes like this the courts are not in accord. In Lehman v. Berdin, 5 Dillon, 340, the United States circuit court for the eastern district of Arkansas, in construing the section under which the bond in question was executed, held that a bond executed in accordance therewith “does not estop the defendant from traversing the affidavit for attachment, and defending against the attachment in every respect, as if such bond had’ not been executed, and the property had remained in the hands of the officer ;” and that, “if the attachment is not sustained, the plaintiff, though he recover judgment for his debt, cannot resort to the bond to compel payment of such judgment.”
Section %65, of the Code of South Carolina, is a section similar to section 337, of Mansfield’s Digest, and concludes as follows : “In all cases the defendant may move to discharge the attachment, as in the case of other provisional remedies.”
In Bates v. Killian, 17 S. C., 553, the defendant having given a bond under this section, the court held he did not thereby waive his right to have the attachment discharged as irregularly and improvidently granted, the court laying stress upon the conclusion of the section under which the bond was given.
Article %59, of the Louisiana Code of Practice, as amended by the act of 17th of March, 1852, provided, that “the defendant, if he appear either in person or by attorney, may, moreover, in every stage of the suit, have the property attached released, by delivering to the sheriff his obligation for the same, exceeding by one half the value of the property attached, with the surety of a good and solvent person residing within the jurisdiction of the court where the action was brought, that he will satisfy such judgment, to the value of the property attached, as may be rendered against him in the suit pending.”
In Love v. Voorhies, 13 La. Ann., 549, the defendant having given bond under this article, the court held the bond had the effect to release the seizure of the property attached, but did not dissolve the attachment, and that the ■defendant was not thereby debarred from subsequently moving to quash the order of attachment.
In the Ohio Code there are the same provisions as those contained in seotions 387 and 337, of Mansfield’s Digest.
In Myers v. Smith, 29 Ohio St., 120, an attachment was issued, and the defendant thereafter executed a bond to the effect that he would perform the judgment of the court, and the court held that the effect of the bond was to supersede all proceedings under the attachment, and to bind the sureties on the bond to perform the judgment that might be recovered against them in the action.
In McAllister v. Eichengreen, 34 Md., 54, the appellant was ■one of the obligors in a bond, given for the purpose of dissolving an attachment, which had been sued out of the court of common pleas of Baltimore city against Moses Coleman and-Coleman, and levied upon their goods. The condition in it was, “that if the said Moses Coleman and-Coleman, should satisfy any judgment that shall be recovered in said case against them, then the said obligation should be void; else to be and remain full force and virtue in law.” The bond was filed and the attachment •dissolved. The case was then proceeded in and a judgment obtained against the Colemans in favor of the appellee, for $771.75, aud $13.60 costs. The court said: “This bond and judgment constitute the cause of action set forth in the declaration, upon which the appellees base their right to recover. By the very terms of the bond the recovery of the judgment fixed the amount to be paid under it. * * * A judgment had settled it beyond controversy.”
The Code of Iowa, of 1851, provided that the defendant in an attachment might, at any time before judgment, discharge the property attached, or any part thereof, by giving bond “ in a penalty at least double the value of the property sought to be released, conditioned that such property or its estimated value shall be delivered to the sheriff to satisfy any judgment which may be obtained against the defendant in that suit, within twenty days after the rendition thereof.”
In Austin v. Burgett, 10 Iowa, 302, an attachment was issued, and the property of the defendant was attached, and he gave the bond prescribed by the Code, and thereafter moved to quash the attachment. The court held that the bond had the effect to release the property from the custody of the law, and to leave it in the possession of the debtor or his legal representatives, free from the attachment, and subject to any disposition he or they might think proper. The court said : “Thi3 bond is á new security and takes the place of the attachment lien; and when executed and delivered, it follows that the attachment has expended its force and is no longer operative. Under such circumstances, to dissolve the attachment upon motion would be, in our judgment, a useless, not to say nugatory act on the part of the court.”
Section 337 of Mansfield’s Digest is a copy of a Kéntucky statute. In Inman v. Strattan, 4 Bush., 445, an attachment was issued, and the defendant, after his property was attached, executed a bond to the plaintiff to the effect that he would perform the judgment of the court; and thereafter filed an affidavit controverting the grounds of the attachment. The court decided that the execution of such a bond discharged the attachment by operation of law, and rendered the obligors in the bond unconditionally bound to perform the judgment of the court in the action; that the sufficiency of the grounds for obtaining the order of attachment- could not thereafter be entered into; and that the defendant was thereby concluded from controverting the grounds of the attachment. See, also, Hazelrigg v. Donaldson, 2 Metcalf, 445.
New York, Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri, Michigan, Kansas and Texas, have, or have had, statutes containing substantially the same provisions as are contained in section 337 of Mansfield’s Digest. The courts in these states have held that the execution of a bond under and in accordance with these statutes, estops the defendant from controverting the attachment, and renders the obligors in the bond absolutely liable for the amount of any judgment the plaintiffs may recover in the action, without reference to the question whether the attachment was rightfully or wrongfully sued out. Haggart v. Morgan, 1 Seld., 428; Coleman v. Bean, 42 N. Y., 94; Delany v. Brett, 4 Robertson, 712; Bildersee v. Aden, 62 Barb., 175; Dieroff v. Winterfield, 24 Wis., 143; Payne v. Snell, 3 Mo., 490; Paddock v. Matthews, 3 Mich., 18; Kennedy v. Morrison, 31 Tex., 220; Endress v. Ent, 18 Kan., 236; The People v. Cameron, 2 Gilman, 468.
But it is sometimes contended that this court has decided this question differently in Ward v. Carlton, 26 Ark., 662. The act construed in that case was the act of March 7, 1867, which amended the attachment laws of the state so as to allow the defendant to contorvert the grounds of attachment set forth in the plaintiff’s affidavit; and reenact the statute allowing the defendant to dissolve the attachment by giving bond, conditioned, that he will appear and answer the plaintiff’s demand at such time and place as by law he should, and that he will pay and abide the judgment of the court; and limited the liability of the sureties on such bond to the value of the property attached. This court held that the intention of this act was to allow the defendant to controvert the truth of the affidavit on which the attachment was issued, and to allow him to do so, notwithstanding he has given bond to dissolve the attachment. The reason given for this construction is, if he was not allowed to do so, an unscrupulous creditor, by perjury, could take advantage of the necessities of his debtor, cause his property to be attached, and force him to give bond and preclude himself from putting in issue the truth of plaintiff’s affidavit, in order to get possession of his property and thereby save himself from ruin ; and that the object of the act was to remedy such hardships. Such is not the condition of a defendant under the present attachment laws of the state. He can get- the possession of his property without giving a bond to dissolve the attachment. The present attachment laws of this state are entirely different from the act of March 7, 1867, and the statutes to which it is an amendment, and Ward v. Carleton, can furnish no aid in construing them.
Prior to the adoption of the code the defendant in an attachment suit could get possession of his property after it was attached by giving the bond to dissolve the attachment. This was the only bond he could give. Now he can do so by giving either one of two bonds. Section 3%7 of Mansfield’s Digest provides that the sheriff’ may deliver to him any property attached and taken from his possession, upon the execution of a bond by him and one or more sufficient sureties, to the effect that the obligors are bound, in double the value of the property, that the defendant shall perform the judgment of the court in the action, or that the property, or its value, shall be forthcoming and subject to the order of the court for the satisfaction of such judgment. Section 337 says: “If the defendant, at any time before judgment, causes a bond to-be executed to the plaintiff by one or more sufficient sureties, to the effect that defendant shall perform the judgment of the court, the attachment shall be discharged and restitution made of any property taken under it, or the proceeds thereof.” If he wishes to contest the attachment, and, in the meantime, remain in possession of his property, he can do so by giving the forthcoming bond. Section 380' provides that the defendant may controvert the attachment by filing an affidavit denying all or any of the material statements of the affidavit upon which'the attachment is issued. Can he do so after he has given bond in accordance with section 337? Sections 377-380 provide that an attachment shall be sustained or discharged at the time-judgment is rendered in the action, unless for sufficient cause the court extends the time of deciding it; that if judgment is rendered in favor of the defendant the attachment shall be discharged; that if judgment is rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and no affidavit or answer, verified by oath, by the defendant be filed, denying the statements of the affidavit upon which the attachment was issued, or motion be made to discharge it, the court shall sustain the attachment; and that upon the attachment being sustained, the property attached, or its proceeds, or the securities taken upon the attachment, shall, by appropriate orders, be applied in satisfaction of the judgment. Section 337, as we have seen, provides that the defendant may discharge the attachment by giving bond that he will perform the judgment of the court. How can the attachment be sustained or discharged after the defendant has discharged it by giving bond ? If the court sustains the attachment, the statute makes it its duty to apply, by appropriate orders, to the satisfaction of the judgment recovered by the plaintiff, the property attached, or its proceeds, or the securities taken upon the attachment. This cannot be done if the defendant has given bond to discharge the attachment, because the property attached, its proceeds, .and the securities taken upon the attachment have passed beyond the control of the court, and are no longer in the custody of the law. By securities referred to in this connection cannot be meant the bond to discharge the attachment, because no action could be taken or judgment rendered upon it in the action in which it was given prior to the act of November 10, 1875, amending the attachment laws of the state, which was passed long after the statute saying what the action of the court should be upon sustaining the attachment.
But this is not all. Section 354, a part of the act of November 10, 1875, says: “If the plaintiff shall recover against the defendant, and the attachment shall have been discharged upon the execution of a bond, as provided by section 337, then the court shall render judgment against the defendant and his sureties in said bond for the amount recovered and the costs of the suit.”
Section 355, also a part of the same act, reads as follows:
“If the defendant shall have given bond for the retention of the property attached, as provided by section 327, and the attachment shall he sustained, the court or jury, in addition to finding the amount of debt or damage due to the plaintiff, shall, upon demand of the plaintiff', also assess the value of the property attached, and the court shall, in addition to judgment against the defendant for the amount found due to the plaintiff and costs, render further judgment, that in case said property shall not be delivered up to the proper officer to be sold, and said officer shall not be able to make said judgment out of the property of said defendant, execution shall issue against the property of said sureties for so much of said judgment as shall not exceed the value of said property, which execution shall be ' enforced as in other cases."
Construing all the statutes we have, cited together, our conclusion is, Moore was precluded by the bond sued on from controverting the grounds of the attachment it was given to discharge, and that Glidewell, the obligor therein, was absolutely liable for the amount recovered by the plaintiff in the action in which it was given, without reference to the question whether the attachment was rightfully or wrongfully sued out.
The judgment of the court below is, therefore, reversed, aud this cause is remanded with an instruction to the court to grant appellant a new trial.