delivered the opinion of the court.
An attachment was taken out for a debt not yet due, under the act of 1826, amending the Code of Practice, which limited the right of sueing out attachments, to cases of debts actually due. The required affidavit was made, that defendants were about to remove their property out of the state before the maturity of the debt. A rule was taken on plaintiffs to show cause why the attachment should not be set aside, on the ground, that the facts set forth in the affidavit were untrue. . On the evidence adduced below, *505disproving the fact that the property attached was to be removed from the state before plaintiffs’ delk became due, the judge dissolved the attachment, and the plaintiffs appealed. .
The atiach-the"act of yet due* 'was not intended as a means of bringing the bntorSyasa^on-servatory mea- Where the de-Sment shows” ’u. prima fade evidence,thatthe facts stated in the ^eavitj”e ^¡n throw the burden of proving1 their verity on the plaintiff.*505. The appellants have contended, that, as the right to attach for a debt not yet due, was not, originally given by the Code of Practice, but was conferred by a special provision of a posterior act, that, therefore, the relief for setting aside attachments unduly obtained, which is given by article 258, of the Code of Practice, does not extend to an attachment for a debt not yet payable, but must be limited to attachments falling within the original provisions of that code. This is a construction to which we cannot assent. It is contrary to the well established rule, that laws in pari materia must be construed with reference to each other. An amendment to an existing law, becomes as much a part of it, as though it had been embodied in the original law when it was made. As to the policy or equity of the distinction attempted to be drawn, we cannot perceive it. The remedy of attachment, is, in itself, a harsh and extraordinary one, and all the relief and protection accorded against its undue exercise for a debt past due, should a fortiori be granted for one not yet due, otherwise the debtor, who already owes a sum of money, and has violated his engagement to pay, would be more favorably treated than him whose obligation is prospective, and whose faith has not yet been violated. But the attachment allowed by the act of 1826, in the case of a debt not yet due, was not intended as a means of bringing the debtor into our courts, but only as a conservatory measure, to which the creditor can entitle himself only on adminis- , . . , ... , tenng proper proof of the fact, which may render it necessary for his protection, whenever they are denied, or disproved, by prima facie evidence. In this case, there has been, on the part of defendants, a sufficient showing, in opposition to the affidavit, to throw on plaintiffs the burden of proving its verity. This, they have not even attemptéd to do. It would be . . ... 1 vexatious, indeed, if creditors were allowed, on a mere affidavit, not to be controverted, to attach the property of *506persons, who, in strict contemplation of law, are not their debtors.
Where no notice is given of an assignment of a debtor’s property, it is Hable to attachment in his hands.We find in the record, a bill of exceptions to the refusal of the judge to grant plaintiffs a commission to Philadelphia, to obtain proof that defendants, since the issuing of thi's attachment, and with a knowledge of its existence, made an assignment of their property to assignees in that city. The judge, we think, did not err. Such an assignment, if proved, would be a nullity as between the plaintiffs and defendants here, for so long as no notice is given of an assignment of the debtor’s property to the person who holds it, the property is liable to attachment in the hands of the latter. In this case, plaintiffs’ own affidavit to obtain the commission, shows, that the attachment was anterior to the assignment ; but it is said, that although the assignment cannot defeat the plaintiffs’ rights, yet it has so far divested defendant’s title to the property attached, as to leave him' without sufficient interest to take any rule or action in relation to it. The delivery of the property in Louisiana was necessary, to complete the assignment. Until then, the defendants and assignors had, we believe, such an interest, as would make them at least competent to appear and protect the property from unlawful attachment by others.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.