delivered the opinion of the court.
1. As stated in O’Hara v. Parker, 27 Or. 156, 164 (39 Pac. 1004, 1005):
In a suit to quiet title “it is sufficient to allege’that the defendant claims an estate or interest in the property adverse to the plaintiff, and call upon him to assert the nature and character of such adverse estate or interest, and subject it to a judicial investigation, that the right of possession between them may be forever quieted.”
2. The following is set down in 7 Words and Phrases, page 6008:
“In the language of Lord Coke, ‘records’ are memorials or remembrances in rolls or parchments of the proceedings and acts of a court of justice, which hath power to hold plea according to the course of the common law, and are of such incontrollable credit and verity that they admit no averment, plea or proof to the contrary (citing authorities). The principle on which the law regards records as of such absolute ver-Page 481' ity that they cannot be contradicted is obvious. They are memorials of the end of strife, when a dispute has been settled by the judgment of the court. If it were otherwise, it would be difficult to see where litigation would end. ”
It would seem that in stating that the defendant appears of record to have some interest in, title to, or lien upon, the realty which the plaintiff claims, the latter has himself taken up the task he would impose upon the former and has exhibited an unimpeachable claim on the part of the defendant; for if it is of record it imports absolute verity unless something else is shown. Of course, a record may be impeached by direct attack; but it is elementary that it is immune from collateral assault. We may well doubt, therefore, whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit.
3. Passing this, however, we address ourselves to the demurrer to the answer, remembering that in our quest we must consider as admitted all its allegations which are well pleaded. Condensing it to its lowest terms, the plaintiff’s attack upon the validity of the defendant’s lien by virtue of his attachment is referable to three points: (1) Insufficiency of the affidavit for attachment; (2) that the writ of attachment was issued before the summons in the action; and (3) that the return of the attachment describes a property different from that which the plaintiff claims to own. In the early case of Crawford v. Roberts, 8 Or. 324, it was stated in the syllabus that:
“An affidavit for an attachment need not state the probative facts out of which the indebtedness of the defendant arose, but it is sufficient if the ultimate facts required by the statute be shown as the basis of the writ.”
■ 5. It is stated in Section 295, L. O. L., that:
“The plaintiff, at the time of issuing the summons, or any time afterward, may have the property of the defendant attached.”
On the doctrine of stare decisis, as established by White v. Johnson, 27 Or. 282, 297 (40 Pac. 511, 50 Am. St. Rep. 726), we must hold that a writ of attachment issued before the issuance of the summons is a nullity, although if the question were new we might well say that it is only the levy of the writ of attachment which is forbidden to take place before sending out the summons. It is said that when or at any time after the summons is issued, the plaintiff may have the property of the defendant attached. The issuance of the writ, however, is not an attachment. Merely placing it in the hands of the sheriff does not in any wise prejudice the property or rights of the defendant. Those are involved only when and not until the writ is levied. In the light of precedent, however, the question on this point must be determined by the decision about when -the summons is issued and the relative order of time of the issuance of the writ. In White v. Johnson, 27
“A summons may be said to have issued in an action commenced in the Circuit or County Courts of this state when it is made out and signed by the plaintiff or his attorney, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, with the intention that it be served upon the defendant. It is difficult to see how anything less than this would constitute an issuance of a summons. The statute requires that the summons shall be served by the sheriff, and without a delivery to him for service such instrument is not yet endowed with vitality for any purpose.”
6, 7. The opinion goes on to hold that the time when the summons was issued is fixed by the sheriff’s indorsement upon it stating the date of its delivery to him. In the present juncture the sheriff has inscribed upon the summons August 31, 1910, as the date upon which he received that document. He has made the same memorandum upon the writ of attachment and has reiterated the statement in his return and certificate of attachment. All this is admitted because it appears in detail in the answer which is attacked only by demurrer. The plaintiff, however, contends that the date attached to the writ by the clerk fixed the time of its issuance. He ignores the principle applied to the issuance of a summons establishing it as the date upon which the sheriff received it. He would apply one rule to the summons and another to the writ. If the issuance of the writ of attachment is not to be controlled by the date it comes into the possession of the sheriff, neither should the issuance of the summons be determined by that canon. If the writ is “issued,” within the meaning of the law, when its author, the clerk, seals and signs it, irrespective of the time it thereafter reaches the custody of the sheriff, then in this collateral attack upon the proceeding and
8, 9. Concerning the description of the property involved, it will be noted that the plaintiff claims to own “the south half of block 1 in Hannah’s Addition to West Union,” while the return to the writ of attachment under which the defendant claims describes the holding as “lots 3, 4, 5 and 6 in block 1 of Hannah’s Addition to Union.” The defendant alleges specifically that these two descriptions cover the same tract. In this suit to quiet title, where the rules of evidence before the chancellor are as liberal as the precedents hereinafter cited would indicate, we cannot say as a matter of law that the defendant would be forbidden to prove this allegation. If, in fact, the same tract of land has been called by different names and the defendant is prior in time with his attachment, judgment and order of sale of the same, he is prior in right; for it is conceded that the plaintiff derived title from the Connallys long after the levy of the attachment. The descriptions mentioned are conventional designations, and we know of no law which would compel everyone afterward to call a certain tract “Black Acre” because that name had been bestowed upon it by some former owner. In proving a description of property, this court, in House v. Jackson, 24 Or. 89 (32 Pac. 1027), laid down the rule that:
“Any description by which the property might be identified by a competent surveyor with reasonable certainty, either with or without the aid of extrinsic evidence, is sufficient.”
Other precedents on this subject are the following: Bogard v. Barhan, 52 Or. 121 (96 Pac. 673, 132 Am. St. Rep. 676); Flegel v. Dowling, 54 Or. 40 (102 Pac. 178, 135 Am. St. Rep. 812, 19 Ann. Cas. 1159, note);
The answer does state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the complaint. On the face of the defendant’s plea we are not authorized to say that as a matter of law he is unable or forbidden to prove the allegation of the identity of the land, although it is called by different names or descriptions.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and Remanded.