This case was before this court at the October term, 1890, and the opinion is reported in 1 S. D. 497, where the facts fully appear. A petion for reargument was granted and it is now again before us on such rehearing. One of the subjects of appeal was an order of the court below refusing to *381discharge and affirmatively continuing in force plaintiffs’ attachment. This motion to discharge was made after defendants had appeared generally in the case, and given an undertaking as provided in Section 5010, Comp. Laws, and was based on the ground that neither service of the summons was personally made, nor its publication commenced, within 30 days from its issue, as required by Section 4993, Comp. Laws. The fact was conceded that the first publication of the summons was made on Sunday, which was the twenty-ninth day after its issue; that there was no publication an Monday, because no paper was issued on that day; and that the next publication was on Tuesday, the thirty-first day. Besides the question as to the legal effect of the Sunday publication, the discussion of counsel, both oral and printed, was directed to the question whether a motion to discharge, under Section 5011, could be made and entertained after defendants had given an undertaking under Section 5010. In determining the general question in the negative, we think we were right, but we are now satisfied we did not sufficiently consider what would be the effect upon the attachment itself of a failure to comply with the statute as to personal service or publication of the summons within the 30 days limited. Assuming for the moment that the Sunday publication was not good, so that the publication of the summons was not commenced within 30 days, did such failure constitute an irregularity simply, waived . or cured by the subsequent appearance of defendants, and their giving an undertaking in recognition of, and as a substitute for, the attachment, or did it make the attachment absolutely void and of no effect from and after the expiration of the 30 days, so that there was no consideration for such undertaking? Section 4993, Comp. Laws, which authorizes an attachment “in an action,” provides, among other things: “And for the purposes of this section an action shall be deemed commenced when the summons is issued; provided, however, that personal service of such summons shall be made, or publication thei eof commenced, within thirty days. ” Thus the vitality of the attachment beyond the thirty days is made to depend upon compliance with this condition. *382At the expiration of the 30 days, the summons not having been personally served, nor its publication commenced, the statutory support ceased, and the attachment itself went town. From that time there was no attachment. Speaking of the force and value of an attachment after a failure to serve or commence publication of the summons as required by that statute, the New York court of appeals, in Blossom v. Estes, 84 N. Y. 614, says: “It was good when issued, but remained so for thirty clays only, unless within that time one or the other of the two steps was taken. The plaintiff, however, neither served the summons personally nor by publication. At the'end of that time the statutory bar fell, and with it the attachment. The jurisdiction which attached upon allowance of the warrant ceased, and as to that proceeding it was as if the statute had been repealed.” See, also, Cummings v. Tabor, 61 Wis. 185, 21 N. W. Rep. 72; Taylor v. Troncoso, 76 N. Y. 599. With this view, it becomes important to ascertain the legal effect of the first publication on Sunday, for, if that were a good and sufficient publication, it, was a commencement of the publication within the 30 days. The attachment was issued upon the ground of the non-residence of defendants, and, as already indicated,' the summons was issued September 3, 1886. On the 2nd day of October the court made an order for the publication of the summons. The first publication thereunder was made on the 3d day of October, which was Sunday, and the next publication on Tuesday, the 5th. There was no issue of the paper on Monday, the 4th. Sunday was the twenty-ninth, and Tuesday the thirty-first day after the issue of the summons. Was the publication on Sunday a legal publication, so as to meet the conditions of Section 4993, Comp. Laws, requiring the publication to be commenced within 30 days? The law of this state (Section 6247, Comp. Laws) prohibits the “service of legal process of any description whatever” on Sunday, except in certain cases, of which this is not one.
In some jurisdictions, under a practice like ours, where the summons is not a writ issuing out of the court, but a notice *383signed by the plaintiff’s attorney, it has been questioned whether the summons was a “process, ” but Section 4807, Comp. Laws, defines “process” as used in our Code of Civil Procedure as ‘ ‘a writ or summons issued in the course of judicial proceedings,” thus definitely making the term “process,” the service of which is prohibited on Sunday, cover a summons. That the several publications required by the order of the court under the statute were to constitute “the service of legal process” is, we- think, hardly debatable. The authority of the court to make the order is stated in said Section 4900 thus: ‘ ‘Such court or judge may grant an order that the service be made by the publication, ” etc.; and Section 4903 provides that the proof of “the service of the summons” shall be, “in case of publication, the affidavit of the printer, ” etc. In this case the service was to be made by six weekly publications. If the first of these could be legally made on Sunday, then the second or all of them could; but to hold that all of them could be so made, would be to hold, in defiance of the statute, that the service might be made on Sunday, for the several publications were to constitute the service. If the first publication on Sunday were valid as a part of the service required, it would be valid if it constituted the entire service, as in case the statute required but one publication; but this would be the very thing the statute forbids.
Our attention has not been called to any case where the validity of a Sunday publication of the summons has been determined under a statute like ours, specifically forbidding the “service of legal process” on Sunday. We find cases where kindred questions have arisen, under general statutes making Sunday dies non, and forbidding labor, except works of necessity and charity; but as to the effect of these general provisions, the views of different courts do not seem to have been in harmony. As notable examples of this difference, see Scammon v. Chicago, 40 Ill. 146, holding against, and Society v. Thompson, 32 Cal. 347, holding for, the validity of a Sunday publication. For the reasons already indicated, however, we are constrained to hold that the publication of the *384summons on Sunday was not a valid publication, and so that the publication of the summons as required by law was not commenced within the 30 days prescribed by statute. As a result of this view, we hold, further, that, at the expiration of the 30 days from the issuing of the summons, the attachment ceased and became void, and that it was not revived by the subsequent appearance of defendants, or the giving of the undertaking under Section 5010. Blossom v. Estes, supra; Kelly v. Countrymen, 15 Hun. 97. Upon failure to serve or publish summons, defendants were entitled of right to release of the attached property, and hence there was no consideration for the undertaking. To this extent the former opinion of this courtis modified, and the order of the circuit court refusing to discharge plaintiff’s attachment, and continuing the same in force, is reversed. Upon all other questions we adhere to our former opinion. Upon this rehearing the appellants shall recover costs as follows: Clerk’s fees thereon, the printing of brief used on reargument, and $20 attorney’s fees.
Bennett, J., concurring.