Case ID: ad_44/html/0395-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Barrett, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

William K. Hawkins, Appellant, v. Solomon L. Pakas, Respondent.
    
      Motion to vacate an attachment on the papers on which it was granted—renewal thereof on affidavits— it is not within the general rule as to first obtaining leave to renew.
    
    A defendant who has unsuccessfully moved to vacate an attachment obtained against him, upon the papers on which it was granted may, under section 683 of the Code of Civil Procedure, renew the motion upon affidavits without obtaining leave of the court. -
    The rule incases of injunction,'arrest and attachment, distinguished from the rule governing the ordinary proceedings attendant upon the course of an action.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, William K. Hawkins, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and •entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 12th day of June, 1899, resettling an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 26th day of May, 1899, vacating an attachment.
    Omar Powell, for the appellant.
    
      Max D. Steuer, for the respondent.
   Barrett, J.:

The point presented by this appeal is whether the defendant, who has been defeated in his application to vacate an attachment upon the papers on which it was granted, may again move without leave •of the court, upon affidavits, to vacate the warrant. It was held in the carefully-considered case of Thalheimer v. Hays (42 Hun, 93) that a defendant had that right under section 683 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We think that case was well decided, and we can add nothing to its reasoning. The appellant contends that this •court, in Sheehan v. Carvalho (12 App. Div. 430), took a different view of the rights of interested'parties under section 683. This, however, is not the fact. Sheehan v. Carvalho was not an attachment case. It was an application to vacate an order to examine witnesses before trial. What we held there was that in the ordinary proceedings attendant upon the course of an action — where dual motions are not specifically provided for — a party cannot move to vacate his adversary’s order for insufficiency of the papers upon which it was granted, and when defeated renew the motion upon Affidavits without leave of the court. That undoubtedly is the general rule, but the Code itself makes an exception in the case of the-three provisional remedies of injunction, arrest and attachment. In the ease of an injunction, it is expressly provided that a denial of a motion founded only upon the papers on which it was granted shall not prejudice a subsequent motion upon affidavits. ' (Code Civ. Proc. § 628.). The same precise language is not used in the casé, of orders of arrest and warrants of attachment,, but the substance is the-same. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 568, 683.) Dual motions are distinctly provided for in both instances; and Justice Barker, in the case cited,, gives good reasons for a liberal construction of the- option thus-afforded to a défendant.

The order appealed from was right, and should .be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.

Van Brunt; P. J., Rumsey, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ.,. concurred.

Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.