Case Name: Simon Deimel et al., Pl'ffs, v. David Scheveland, Def't
Court: New York Court of Common Pleas
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1890-02-10
Citations: 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 713
Docket Number: 
Parties: Simon Deimel et al., Pl’ffs, v. David Scheveland, Def’t.
Judges: 
Reporter: New York State Reporter
Volume: 29
Pages: 713–716

Head Matter:
Simon Deimel et al., Pl’ffs, v. David Scheveland, Def’t.
(New York Common Pleas, General Term,
Filed February 10, 1890.)
I. Attachment—Affidavit.
Affidavits stating that affiant was informed by defendant’s bookkeeper that he had left the state, taking with him all the money he could raise, and that he did not intend to return, and of the bookkeeper and others that defendant had left the city and his business, make a prima facie case, and are sufficient to sustain a warrant of attachment as against an application to vacate made by another creditor.
2. Same—Publication.
The service of summons was commenced within thirty days and continued four weeks, when it was discovered that it was a six days and not a ten days summons. An order amending it was procured and service, as amended, continued six weeks. Held, that the summons was amendable in that respect, and that publication of the original summons for four weeks, and the amended summons for two, was sufficient to satisfy the statute.
Appeal from order of the general term of the city court of New York, affirming order denying motion to vacate an attachment.
The motion was made by Josiah Partridge, an execution creditor of the defendant.
Phillip Carpenter, for app’lt; Simson Wolf, for resp’t.

Opinion:
Labrémose, Ch. J.
This is an application made by a stranger to the above entitled action, who is also a judgment creditor of defendant, to have the attachment granted to plaintiff herein vacated and set aside, in aid of said outsider's execution upon his judgment. It is argued in the first place that the affidavits upon which the attachment was granted were defective, in that they did not allege sufficient facts to raise an overwhelming suspicion of fraud on defendant's part. I am of opinion that there was enough in the papers to authorize the warrant. The plaintiff alleged that he went to defendant's regular place of business several times to inquire for him, and was there informed by defendant's bookkeeper that defendant had left the state, taking with him all the money he could raise, and that he did not intend to return. This was corroborated by an affidavit of said book-keeper to the effect that defendant had left the city of Hew York and his business, and that the same was left without any one to take charge thereof. There were other affidavits averring in a general way that defendant had left the city and his business. These papers were prima facie facts sufficient. Of course if the defendant had appeared and explained his absence, and repudiated the statements of his book-keeper, the warrant would have been vacated. Counsel for appellant is in effect arguing that all the presumptions of innocence, which exist when a defendant moves to vacate an attachment on his own property, should obtain here, when a subsequent lienor is endeavoring to get in ahead of plaintiff. The fact is that, since the granting of the attachment, the propriety of it has been confirmed by defendant's continued'absence. The affidavits raised presumptions that defendant had departed from the state, and had removed property from the state, with intent to defraud his creditors. The subsequent course of events has demonstrated that these presumptions were actual facts. This should not be overlooked upon the application to vacate made by an outsider, who has no stronger moral claim than plaintiff, and who is seeking only to discover some technical flaw which' will overcome the advantage gained by superior diligence. All that we can consider on the present motion is whether the moving affidavits made out a prima facie case, and we have no hesitation in holding that they did.
An order was made directing the service of the summons by publication, and such service was begun within thirty days after the attachment was granted, and continued by inserting the summons in the newspapers named once a week for four weeks. It was then discovered that such summons was a six days summons, and not a ten days summons, as required by § 3165 of the Code, subd. 2. Thereupon, an order was procured amending such summons by substituting ten days for six days; and, in its amended form, publication was continued six weeks longer. It is evident that the latter four weeks of publication were surplusage on any theory. The first publication of the summons in the amended form was more than thirty days after the granting of the warrant, so that unless the publication of the six days summons can be held sufficient, the attachment must fall.
The question then is whether the publication of the original summons for four weeks, and of the amended summons for two weeks, will satisfy the requirements of the statute. . It has been held that a six days summons issued under such circumstances is not void. " The summons was not an absolute nullity. The insertion of six days instead of ten was an irregularity merely. A judgment entered by default after the service of such a summons would have not been absolutely void, but simply irregular or erroneous, to be corrected by motion on appeal." Gribbon v. Freel, 93 N. Y., 93. It is to be noticed that the right to amend in that case was deduced from the general power of amendment inherent in the court. In the case at bar the authority to amend is derived from § 743. Subdivision 2 of § 3165 grants a special power of amendment in cases where the summons has been issued before the granting of the order of publication, evidently having in view actions where one or more defendants have been served personally within the jurisdiction, and it thereafter becomes necessary to serve other defendants by publication. Here the summons was not issued until the granting of the order, and this amendment was not covered by the express language of § 3165. Still, under the general phraseology of § 723, the summons was properly amendable, and it follows that plaintiff, having presented a six days summons to the court, was ordered to publish it. Up to the time of the order of amendment the six days summons was " the summons " in the action. It was not void, though irregular. It was a valid process of the court, susceptible of being made perfect by subsequent amendment. Publication of it was compliance with the order of publication, and also with § 638, which requires that service by publication of "the summons" be commenced within thirty days. After the amendment, the six days summons ceased to be "the summons" in the action, and the ten days summons took its place. The order of publication still standing, it was required that publication of " the summons,"' that is to say, of the original summons as amended, be continued for two weeks longer, which was done. Under this view of the matter plaintiff began service by publication of the summons within thirty days from the time of the granting of the warrant, and such service was made complete by the continuance thereof. All of this seems to me to follow legitimately from the general proposition that a six days summons is not void. If a six days sum-moms would be sufficient for valid service without the state, subject to amendment thereof after judgment, as was held in Gribbon v. Freel, supra, certainly the publication of such an irregular summons for a portion of the six weeks should be held sufficient to sustain the attachment in the case at bar.
It may be objected that the judgment roll in this action does not contain any proof of publication of the original summons for the first four weeks, there being nothing on this subject but the affidavit of the printers as to the publication of the summons in the amended form for six weeks. The missing proof could however be made part of the judgment roll at any time by order, and upon the present determination we are not limited to the bare contents of the judgment roll. This is not an appeal from the judgment, but from an order refusing to vacate and set aside the attachment and such judgment We can therefore properly con sider the additional papers submitted, in which the required proof is supplied.
The order of the city court should be affirmed, with costs. Bischoff, J., concurs.