
    MICHAEL GARMON v. DANIEL BARRINGER.
    In an original attachment, any defect in the affidavit is waived by appearance and pleading in chief.
    The cases of Powell v. Hampton, Conf. Rep. 86, Tyson v. Person, 2 Hawks, 336, and Lavender v. Pritchard, 2 Hay. 337, approved.
    This was an action of assumpsit, instituted in the County Court of Cabarras, by original attachment. The plaintiff gave the usual bond for prosecution, in which he was joined by one Miller, as his surety. The writ stated the oath of the plaintiff, that the defendant was an inhabitant of another state. But the affidavit returned set forth only the amount of the debt. The defendant replevied the estate attached, and pleaded non assumpsit; on which issue was joined, a trial had, and a verdict and judgment given for the plaintiff; from which the defendant appealed to the Superior Court.
    On the last Circuit, before his Honor Judge Toomer, the defendant moved to quash the writ, for the defect in the affidavit; which was refused.
    Upon the trial of the issue, the plaintiff, wishing to use as a witness a person who was the administrator and one of the next of kin of Miller, the surety moved for [leave to give another bond, with other sureties, and to have the first cancelled. To this the defendant objected, that the Court had no power to change the bonds, or discharge the first surety. But His Honor allowed the motion ; and the ■witness was examined ; and a verdict being returned for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed.
    üpon t])e trial of an menced°by original ment, "the bondexe-“I®'1 “P°n the process veiled°and another given m order to enable the •plaintiff to examine a surety to it
    No counsel appeared for the defendant.
    
      D. F. Caldwell, for the plaintiff.
   Ruffin, Chief Justice,

having stated the case as above, proceeded as follows: — In the opinion of this Court, there is no error on either of the points made in the exceptions.

The failure of the plaintiff to entitle himself to the particular writ, ^ making an affidavit to the foreign residence of the defendant, cannot be taken advantage of now, according to the rule, that objections to the process are waived by a plea in bar. Besides that, the 26th section of the act of 1777 (1 Rev. Stat. c. 6, sec. 3,) provides particularly, that if an attachment be issued without bond and affidavit taken and returned, as mentioned in the previous section, “ it shall be abated on the plea of the defendant.” The fourth resolution in Powell v. Hampton, Conf. Rep. 86, is, that the matter must be put on the record by plea, and cannot avail on a writ of error, where the judgment was by default. Without reconsidering that point, we think that the statute must, at the least, mean, that where the defendant does appear, the defect may and must be pleaded in abatement according to the general principles of pleading; and, consequently, the defect is cured by the plea in bar.

Upon the other point, the case of M'Culloch v. Tyson and Person, 2 Hawks, 336, and the previous one of Lavender v. Pritchard, 2 Hay. Rep. 337, authorize the acts of the Court. Those were cases of appeal bonds, on which the judgment may be summary: and yet they were cancelled, and others substituted to let in a witness, The purpose of the statutes is to secure the opposite party. If that be done, there is no reason, founded in justice, why a witness may not be made competent in this manner.

Per Cukiam. Judgment affirmed.  