delivkí. jd the opinion ob the doubt.
On May 29, 1895 this action was instituted on an account against the appellee, Lott. An attachment was obtained in the action and levied ■ upon a one-sixth interest in a house and lot. On June 10, 1895, Lott made a deed for the one-sixth interest in the house and lot, upon which the attachment had been levied, to Lizzie Orr (then deceased), who was the mother of some of the appellees, and they accepted the deed.
By section 2063, Kentucky Statutes the children were vested with whatever title that would have passed to their mother had she been living when the deed was made. The affidavit for the attachment was embraced in the petition. In other words, there was not a separate affidavit filed. It sets out fully all that was essential to be alleged under section 196 Civil Code of Practice to have entitled the plaintiff to an attachment. The petition was verified by the attornéy for the appellant. The Jurat reads as follows:
“S. H. Bush says that the plaintiff is a corporation; that he is its attorney; that the above statements are true.” The affidavit required by section 196 Civil Code of Practice should be made by the plaintiff but under a certain state of ca.se the agent or attorney of the plaintiff may make the affidavit.
Section 550, Civil Code of Practice, reads as follows: “Any affidavit which this Code requires or authorizes a party to* . make may, unless otherwise expressed, be made by his agent or attorney, if he be absent from the county ****•#- *589Í5). The affidavit of an agent' or attorney must state the absence from tbe county of the party or parties for whom it is made, and the fact that the affiant is agent or attorney.” It will be observed that two things must appear in an affidavit which an attorney or agent is entitled to make. It is essential that the agent or attorney should state the absence .from the county of the party for whom he is making the affidavit, and also that the party making it is agent or attorney. When an affidavit is thus made by an agent or attorney, the party before whom it is to be used is entitled from that affi-. ■davit to know that the party is absent from the county, and that the person who makes the affidavit is his agent or attorney. If these facts do not appear the affidavit is defective.
Section 117, Civil Code of Practice, reads .as follows: ^‘Pleadings, the verification of which is required by this -Code, must be verified as follows: * * * (2). ‘‘That of a county, or of a municipal or private corporation, must be verified by its chief officer or agent, upon whom a summons in the action is lawfully served, or might be lawfully served if it were a defendant; or, if it havd no such officer nor agent residing in the county in which the action is brought, or is ■pending, it may be .verified by its attorney.” * * * * It wall be seen when plaintiff is a corporation and sues out an ■attachment, the affidavit must be verified by the officer upon whom a summons in the action might be lawfully served, if .it were a defendant. If it have no such agent in the county "then it may be verified by its attorney. When the attorney verifies for the corporation under the provision of the Code, it must appear that he is authorized to do so by a statement *590that the officer or agent who( would be required to verify if in the county is absent therefrom.
When we consider thei provisions of sections 117 and 550, Civil Code of Practice, it is manifest that it is just as essential in an affidavit which he makes for a corporation to show the absence of certain officers who are authorized, to verify a pleading or make an affidavit for it as it is to show in an affidavit the absence of the individual for whom it i^made. It, therefore, follows! that' the affidavit is defective. The attachment is not void and were there no- rights intervening he could amend his affidavit, as he did do, and maintain the iien which was acquired by the levy of the order of attachment.
We think in this case the children of Lizzie Orr acquired title to the interest in the house and lot upon which this attachment was levied by virtue of the deed to which we have alluded. This right was acquired after the attachment had been levied, and they were entitled to be made parties to the-action and controvert plaintiff’s right to a superior lien upon-the property.
Sub-division 2, section 208, Civil Code of Practice, reads; as follows:
“A plaintiff may, by an amended affidavit, conforming -to 19G, cure a defect in the affidavit upon which, he obtained an attachment; or may state a ground of attachment not mentioned in his affidavit, whether it may have existed when hefted the first affidavit, or may have arisen afterward; and may thus acquire a lien upon the attached property, if the-proceedings conform to law in other respects-; but such lien--shall not affect a bona fide right to, or lien previously acquired upon, the property, by attachment or otherwise.” The *591court upon the face of the pleading discharged the attachment but allowed tie- plaiatiff to amend his affidavit, and in which amendment it appeared that at the time the original affidavit was made the officers of the corporation, who should have been there, were'absent from the county; hence the attorney was entitled to make the affidavit for them. But, as the affidavit was defective as we have herein endeavored to show, the lien which the plaintiff acquired by the amended! affidavit can not affect the rights of the children of Lizzie Orr, as they acquired such right before the amended .affidavit was filed conforming to the requirements of the Code. This view is in accord with the-several adjudications of this court.
The judgment is affirmed.