delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff made oath to the existence of the debt for which suit is brought, and further stated, that the defendant was about to remove from the State, without leaving in it sufficient property to satisfy the petitioner’s demand. On filing the petition with this affidavit annexed, an order of arrest issued, and the defendant was taken into custody. *171He gave bond with security, that he would not depart from the State without leave of the court; or that he would pay the judgment which might be rendered against him.
Although a party be arrested and held to bail, service of the petition and citation cannot he dispensed with. Knowledge of the suit on the part of the defendant, no matter how clearly it may be brought home to -him, will not mality has not been pursued.*171It appears, however, that without this leave, he did depart, and as the citation which subsequently issued against him, could not be served,copies of it, and the petition, were left with the bail.
The plaintiff proceeded to take judgment by default, and had it made final. The defendant has appealed, and contends in this court that the whole proceedings were illegal, as he never was cited.
By the 4th section of an act passed on the 25th of March, 1828, it is provided, that in all cases where attachments, arrests, and sequestrations are demandable, the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, having made affidavit, the process required shall issue, without any petition being then presented.— Acts. 1828, p. 150, sec. 4.
This regulation was intended to obviate an inconvenience which sometimes arose from transient debtors, getting out of reach of process, before a petition could be drafted, and copies of it and citation procured; and its object was not only to secure their persons to respond to the final judgment, but also to enable the creditor to make service of the petition and citation. The experience of this case shews, that the legislature have failed in their object when the debtor can find bail. For, though arrested, he has, by giving bond, effectually prevented service of either petition or citation on him. The question then is, whether these can be dispensed with; or whether the arrest can stand in place of them, so as to authorize judgment by default. We think not. The law, as it is well known, and it is unnecessary to cite its provisions, requires citation as the basis of all proceedings, and declares the judgment void, which is not pre- . ceeded by it. Knowledge of the suit on the part of the defendant, no matter how clearly it may be brought home *172to him, will not suffice if this formality has not been pursued. Nothing will cure the defect but appearance, and pleading to matters other than the defect of the citation. Now though it is certainly not very agreeable to see the ingenuity °f a debtor, baffle and set at nought a provision of law, made more effectually to coerce his appearance, yet we cannot help it. The conduct of the defendant, in truth, amounts to nothing more, than that he knew a suit was about to be commenced against him, and evaded the process. This we are afraid many others do, and such conduct does not authorize judgment against them. The knowledge gained by arrest, cannot be distinguished from that acquired through any other source, as to its effect on the debtor. It is not citation, but a means of having citation made. It is clear the law, notwithstanding the arrest, contemplated the . service of petition and citation.
It .is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be reversed, and that the suit be dismissed with costs in both courts.