Court Opinion

ID: 7337087
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 23:14:55.847772+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:13.437558
License: Public Domain

INGRAHAM, J.
The plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant to recover $4,000, and obtained a warrant of attachment. The defendant moved to vacate such attachment, and that motion was denied. The order denying that motion recited that the motion was upon the affidavit of the defendant upon which the order to show cause why the attachment should not be vacated was granted, the warrant of attachment and the affidavits upon which it was granted, and upon the pleadings and proceedings had herein. It is apparent that the motion was made upon the affidavits upon which the attachment was granted, and it was improper for the court to consider pleadings or proceedings not before the court when the attachment was originally granted. If the order intend*296ed to imply that the court considered the complaint which had been verified and served subsequent to the granting of the attachment, or the proceedings subsequent thereto, it was irregular, and such pleadings or proceedings cannot be considered in determining this appeal. The question is to be determined upon the papers upon which the attachment was granted, and the sufficiency of those papers is the sole question that was before the court below, and the sole question which is before us on this appeal.
Section 641 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the warrant must be subscribed by the judge and the plaintiff’s attorney, and must briefly recite the ground of the attachment. Nothing in this section requires that the nature of the cause of action shall be stated in the attachment, or that a mistake in the warrant as to the nature of the cause of action is fatal to the attachment. Section 636 of the Code provides that, to entitle the plaintiff to such a warrant, he must show by affidavit, to the satisfaction of the judge granting the same, that one of the causes of action specified in section 635 of the Code exists against the defendant; that the defendant is either a foreign corporation or is not a resident of the state; “or if the defendant is a natural person or a domestic corporation, that he or it has removed, or is about to remove property from the state, with intent to defraud his or its creditors; or has assigned, disposed of or secreted, or is about- to assign, dispose of or secrete property with the like intent.” The warrant of attachment recites - that an application has been made for an attachment; that the said defendant “is about to dispose of her property with intent to defraud her creditors; and upon such application it duly appeared by affidavit, to the satisfaction of the judge granting this warrant, that a cause of action exists in said action in favor of said plaintiff against the said, defendant for the recovery of $4,000, with interest thereon from the 1st day of December, 1895.” Then, after stating what appear to be several causes of action to recover this sum of $4,000, the warrant continues: “And the said defendant has wrongfully converted the personal property of the said plaintiff, and the said defendant is about to dispose of her property with intent to defraud her creditors, and injury to the plaintiff’s personal property in consequence of the defendant’s fraud, upon which ground this warrant is granted.” It would appear that there was recited in this warrant the ground of the attachment, within section 641 of the Code, and that the warrant contained all that was necessary as prescribed by that section. It also contained allegations not required, but these additional allegations do not render the warrant void, nor would they justify the court in vacating it.
We also think that the affidavit submitted was sufficient to justify the court in determining that the defendant was about to dispose of her property with intent to defraud her creditors. The plaintiff’s affidavit expressly states that the said defendant is, to deponent’s knowledge, “about to remove her property, or of the properties of said defendant may have and own, after disposing of the same as aforesaid, from the city of.New York, and also from the United States, with the intent to defraud her creditors.” In *297a further affidavit plaintiff deposes that “the said defendant has informed this deponent a great number of times, subsequent to the year of 1895, that she, the said defendant, would pay no debts of any nature or kind whatsoever, and that she, the said defendant, would dispose of her property, and not pay any debts whatever, and leave the state of Hew York, and leave the United States; * and that she, said defendant, would sell all her property, and ‘skip out/ if she were hard pressed by or with claims for money she owed; * * and that before she, the said defendant, would pay this deponent’s debt, or any part thereof, she would sell all of her property, and leave the state and country.” It further appeared that the defendant had advertised her business for sale in the Brooklyn Eagle, in which advertisement she stated that she would soon leave for Europe, and would dispose of her said business at one-fourth its value; that there was also inserted in the Hew York Herald an advertisement of the defendant stating that she was soon leaving for Europe, and wished to supply customers with her wares at one-fourth the former price. These allegations were sufficient to justify the court in granting the attachment, upon the ground that the defendant was about to dispose of her property with intent to defraud her creditors.
We also think that a cause of action was alleged in the affidavit. The substance of the affidavit entered into an agreement under which the plaintiff advanced to the defendant the sum of $4,000; that the plaintiff was induced to enter into said agreement, and pay the money to the defendant, by certain representations, which are set forth in the affidavit, and which are therein alleged to have been fraudulent, false, and untrue. The nature of this cause of action would appear to be an action to recover money paid by the plaintiff under the contract between herself and the defendant, which contract was induced by the fraudulent misrepresentations of the defendant, the fraud justifying the rescission of the contract by the plaintiff, which would entitle plaintiff to maintain an action to recover the consideration paid by the plaintiff in entering into the contract. That this cause of action may be incorrectly described in the warrant of attachment would not justify the court in vacating the attachment, if a good cause of áction appeared in the affidavits upon which the attachment was granted.
The allegations in these affidavits would seem to be sufficient to justify a justice of the court in granting the attachment, and we think the order appealed from was right, and should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.
PATTERSON and O’BRIEN, JJ., concur.