The plaintiffs’ attorney on the 15th day of March, 1892, filed with the’justice an affidavit, in which he made oath that he had good reason to believe and did be*123lieve that the defendant was about to abscond or remove from this state, and had secreted about his person, or elsewhere, money, or other property, to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the demand in the suit. On the 14th day of May, 1892, the justice with whom the affidavit was so filed, issued a writ against the body of the defendant, and, on the 25th day of May, 1892, the same was served by arresting his body. R. L., s. 1477, as amended by No. 47 of the Acts of 1890, in general terms prohibits the arrest and imprisonment of a debtor in actions founded on contract. By R. L., s. 1478, this section is qualified so as to authorize the issue of a writ as a cafias, when the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, files with the authority issuing the writ an affidavit, stating that he has good reason to believe and does believe that the defendant is about to abscond or remove from this state, and has secreted property to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the demand upon which he is to be arrested.
The affidavit filed in this case was frima facie evidence of the fact, that, sixty days before the writ issued, the defendant was about to abscond or remove from this state, and that he had secreted about his person, or elsewhere, money, or other property, to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the demand in suit; but it was not evidence of the fact, that, at the time of the issuing of the writ, he was about to abscond or'remove from this state, and had money, or other property, to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the demand in suit. It is clear that the affidavit must show the intent and circumstances of the defendant at the time of the issuing of the writ. His intentions and circumstances in the past are immaterial. The fact that the defendant was, at some time prior to the issuing of the writ, about to abscond or remove from the state, and had money, or other property, to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the *124demand in suit, did not authorize the issuing of the writ as a capias. His intention to remove or abscond from the state may have been abandoned, and his money expended long before the issuing of the writ. To subject a debtor to arrest in an action founded on contract, it must appear from the affidavit that he is about to abscond or remove, and has property to an amount exceeding twenty dollars, or sufficient to satisfy the demand in suit, at the time the writ issued. These facts cannot be made to appear from an affidavit made and filed sixty days before the issuing of the writ. It will not be presumed, from the fact that the defendant was about to abscond or remove from the state sixty days before the issuing of the writ, that he was about to do so at the time the writ issued ; it will not be presumed, from the fact that he then had twenty dollars in money, or other property, that he had it at the time the writ issued. The justice issuing the writ in this case was informed in respect to the intention and circumstances of the defendant sixty days before the writ issued, but he was not informed, in the manner provided by the statute, of his intention and circumstances at the time he issued the writ; and the writ issued as a capias without authority.
The plaintiff claims that the defendant waived the objection now urged by not objecting at the first opportunity. An objection that the court has no jurisdiction may be made at any time; it is not dilatory matter, which is waived if not objected to at the first opportunity. French v. Holt, 57 Vt. 187. The justice did not have jurisdiction to issue the writ as a capias, without an affidavit first filed, and jurisdiction of the process was essential to the jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter. It has been held, that, when a writ issues as a capias in actions founded on contract, without an affidavit first filed, or if an insufficient affidavit is filed, the writ, so far as it purports to authorize the arrest of the body *125of the defendant, is void. Aiken v. Richardson, 15 Vt. 500; Muzzy v. Howard, 42 Vt. 23.
Judgment reversed, motion to dismiss sustained, ¿ztzéÍ cause dismissed with costs.