delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question to be determined is, whether or not the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the appellant’s interplea. Section 29 of the Attachment Act (Hurd’s Stat., 1901, p. 179) limits the issue on such an interplea to the inquiry “ into the right of property ” as between the- plaintiff in the attachment and the inter-pleader. In City Ins. Co. v. Commercial Bank, 68 Ill. 348, the interpleader filed four pleas, only one of which was that he was the owner of the property levied on. Issue was joined on that plea, and the other three pleas were demurred to and the demurrer was overruled. The plaintiff seems to have stood by the demurrer. The court (lb. 352) say : “ It is apparent that the only fact involved in the case is as to the ownership of the property. Indeed, the only inquiry that can be made, under the section of the statute that authorizes a party to interplead in an attachment proceeding, is as to the right of property.” See, also, Bostwick v. Blake, 145 Ill. 85, 91.
In 11 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 1185, it is stated to be the weight of authority that a claimant cannot question the validity of the process under which the property was seized, citing numerous cases. Also (pages 1165 and 1185) that “A statutory trial of the right of property levied on by legal process is a proceeding independent of the main cause óf action, and is determined separately from it,” and that “ as a rule, the only issue determinable in a statutory proceeding to try the right of property is the -claimant’s title to the property.” Therefore, the precise question involved here is, whether the interplea is a good plea of property in appellant. The assignment by Gerhard Terlinden, under which appellant claims title, is, by the plea, averred to .have been made October 25, 1901. The writ of attachment was issued and purports, by the return thereto, to have been served on the garnishee August 17, 1901. But it is averred in the plea (1) that 'the writ was issued contrary to the statute, and is void; and (2) that by the amended declaration the action was, December 6, 1901, changed from tort to contract, and thereby the writ became dissolved and void. Whether the writ was properly issued, and was a valid writ, depends on the affidavit filed by the plaintiff, which, omitting venue and jurat, is as follows:
“ William Yocke, as agent and attorney for Disoonto Gesellschaft, a corporation of Berlin, Germany, being duly sworn, deposes and says that Gerhard Terlinden, alias Theodor Graefe, is indebted to said Disoonto Gesellschaft, after allowing all just credits and set-offs, in the sum of five thousand dollars, upon certain drafts and acceptances obtained by the said Gerhard Terlinden, alias Theodor Graefe, from the said Disoonto Gesellschaft by means of gross forgeries and various other criminal and fraudulent devices; and affiant further states that the said Gerhard Terlinden, alias Theodor Graefe, is not a resident of this state; that his place of residence is Oberhausen, in the Kingdom of Prussia, Germany, but he is at present confined within the county jail of Cook County, III, pending hi's extradition to Prussia, as a fugitive from the justice of that state; that he is about to depart from this state with the intention of having his effects removed from this state, and is about to remove his property from this state, to the injury of the said Disconto Gesellschaft, and has within two years last past fraudulently conveyed or assigned his effects, or a part thereof, so as to hinder and delay his creditors, and has within two years last past fraudulently concealed or disposed of his property so as to hinder and delay his creditors, and is about fraudulently to conceal, assign or otherwise dispose of his property or effects, so as to hinder or delay his creditors.”
The ground urged by appellant’s counsel in support of the objection that the writ was illegally issued, is that the statute only authorizes an attachment when the relation of creditor and debtor exists between the plaintiff and defendant, and when, therefore, the action must be ex contractu, and that the facts stated in the affidavit only warrant an action ex delicto. "W e think the facts stated in the affidavit would warrant an action ex delicto, but also think they warrant an action of assumpsit; that the appellant may waive the tort and sue in assumpsit. 1 Chitty on Pl., 5th Am. ed., secs. 387-88. The affidavit avers that appellant is indebted to appellee, after allowing all just credits and set-offs, in the sum of $5,000. The affidavit, as we think, fully warranted the issuing of the writ. Appellant’s 1 counsel contends that appellee elected to sue for tort, by-filing its original declaration in case, and that by its subsequently filing an amended declaration in assumpsit the attachment was dissolved. If it be conceded, as contended by counsel, that an original attachment cannot be legally sued out in an action ex delicto, and that the doctrine of election as between inconsistent remedies applies in the present case, it may reasonably be assumed that appellee, in suing out an attachment on an affidavit of facts which support an action on an implied assumpsit, thereby elected to bring such an action. The defendant in attachment, October 22,1901, moved the court to quash the attachment and dismiss the suit, assigning as a reason for the motion, that the action was in tort, which motion the court denied, and gave leave to the plaintiff to file an amended declaration. The mistake in pleading, in the first instance, and the subsequent amendment, did not have the effect of dissolving the attachment. The amendment was permissible under section 29 of the Practice Act, and the cause of action was the same, although the form of action, as between the two declarations, differed. Wright v. Brownell, 3 Vt. 425. The jurisdiction of the court remained continuously from the time of service on the garnishee, August 17, 1901, till the date of judgment against the garnishee, February 13, 1903. Therefore, the claim of title of appellant, being under an assignment made, as averred in the interplea, October 25, 1901, failed.
Appellant’s counsel argue that he being a resident of this state, and the plaintiff in the attachment a non-resident, as averred in the plea, he should have been given preference. This, notwithstanding he has no title. The question as to such preference cannot be raised in an inquiry as to the right of property. This is expressly decided in City Ins. Co. v. Commercial Bank, 68 Ill. 348, 352.
Appellant’s counsel argues matters not averred in the interplea, as that interrogatories to the garnishee were not filed in apt time, in which appellant is not concerned, and that there was not- legal service of the writ of attachment on the garnishee. Whether the demurrer was properly sustained to the interplea, must be decided by reference to the averments of the plea. Besides, the garnishee appeared and answered.
The judgment sustaining the demurrer to appellant’s interplea will be affirmed.
Affirmed.