Court Opinion

ID: 3605813
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:51:18.697151+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:28.238494
License: Public Domain

If the affidavit was insufficient, upon which this attachment was ordered, a question of law is presented and the order of the General Term is undoubtedly reviewable here. (Allen v. Meyer,73 N.Y. 1; Steuben County Bank v. Alberger, 78 id. 252.) In this case, the writ was applied for upon statements made upon the information and belief of the deponent and the question is whether the information, concerning the material facts, appeared to have been acquired in such a manner as to justify the judge in acting upon it. Was the source of the information such as the judge could accept as satisfactory? The affiant, in such cases, is not required to have a personal knowledge of the facts required to be stated; but it is essential that his information must appear to have been competently derived; as otherwise the judicial officer, whose action has been invoked, is without jurisdiction to proceed. It is clear that the attorney in this case obtained his information by a communication made through the telephone upon the morning of the day upon which the complaint and affidavit were sworn to, and that his belief was based upon it, in making his statements concerning the facts constituting the cause of action, the absence of counterclaims, and the non-residence of the defendants. Those were the material facts required to be proved to the satisfaction of the judge and we do not think that the proof as to the source of the information concerning them was sufficient; for the reason that there was lacking any degree of certainty that the plaintiff himself ever made the communication to the affiant. There would be no objection to the information having been conveyed through the medium of the telephone, if it had been made to appear that the affiant was acquainted with the plaintiff and recognized his voice; or if it had appeared, in some satisfactory way, that he knew it was the plaintiff, who was speaking with him. None of these facts, however, *Page 218 
were averred. There was absolutely nothing, upon which the judge could pass, to show that it was the plaintiff who was speaking and not some undisclosed person, who, in the plaintiff's name, furnished to the attorney the information made use of. The perfection, to which the invention of the telephone has been brought, has immensely facilitated the inter-communication of individuals at distant points and, inasmuch as the voice of the speaker is heard, in most, if not in all, cases, the identification of the speaker should be possible. The very facility of communication and of identification permits, and, therefore, imposes a duty upon, the party, who invokes judicial action upon the strength of information so received, to state his knowledge, or his grounds for believing, that it actually came from the party required to furnish it. To authorize an attachment to issue, upon the affidavit furnished here, was in disregard of the rule which requires that the source of information shall be disclosed in such a way as to enable the court to decide upon the probable truth of the statements and the authenticity of the jurisdictional facts. Judicial action upon such a source of information, as was here disclosed, was justified, below, by analogy with telegraphic communication. The analogy is incomplete. If the information comes through the telephone, it is quite possible to identify the speaker. Then, too, there is not, in the case of a telephonic communication, any record; like the message, which, in the case of the use of the telegraph, remains for reference and verification.
For these reasons, as well as for those stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice BARRETT, at Special Term, and of Mr. Justice VAN BRUNT, dissenting at the General Term, the order of the General Term should be reversed and that of the Special Term should be affirmed, with costs in all the courts.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly. *Page 219