Court Opinion

ID: 8337260
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 22:50:45.696531+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:45:32.512750
License: Public Domain

GILDERSLEEVE, J.
This action is for a personal injury. The plaintiff procured an attachment to be issued for the amount demanded in the complaint. The defendant appeared specially, for the purpose of moving to set aside the attachment, on the ground that the papers upon which it was granted were insufficient. The motion was decided adversely to defendant, and an urder was entered sustaining the attachment, but reducing the *488amount for which defendant’s property was seized or impleaded to the sum of $2,500. The appeal before us is from this order. It was first urged by the appellant that the superior court of the city of New York has no jurisdiction in the case, for the reason that it does not appear that plaintiff is a resident of the city of New York. This ground is obviously untenable, inasmuch as in the plaintiff’s uncontradicted affidavit, upon which the attachment was granted, she swears that she is “now residing in the city of New York.”
The claim of the defendant that the granting of the attachment,, under the facts as they appear, give a retroactive effect to the provisions of section 635 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which went into operation September 1, 1895, cannot be maintained. The action was not commenced until after September 1, 1895. The statute in question did not create the cause of action, but is only remedial.
The plaintiff seems to have met all the requirements of section 635 of the Code. For these reasons, and the reasons stated in the opinion of the learned special term judge, the order appealed from should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.