153 N.W. 901 | S.D. | 1915
It is conceded that appellant has a valid claim against defendant, but the grounds upon which the warrant of attachment was issued were in all things' denied. These ground's were: (a) that defendant is not a resident -of this state; (b) that defendant has departed- therefrom with intent to defraud his creditors; (c) that defendant has departed therefrom- with intent to avoid the service of summons; (d) that defendant has assigned- and disposed o-f, and is about to-' assign and dispose of, and secrete his property with intent to defraud 'h-is -creditors.
The evidence clearly does not support the claim that defendant departed from this state with the intent to defraud his creditors, nor is it sufficient to overturn the conclusion of the trial court that he did not depart i therefrom with intent to avoid the service of summons upon him. It clearly appears that he left the state temporarily pursuant to the advice and persuasion of his physician. It clearly appears that upon the talcing over the affairs of the Hughes County Bank by the state banking department, the defendant, who was and had 'been for years the president of said bank, was almost completely prostrated and was ill both mentally and physically; that before his departure he caused to be sent to all his creditors a complete list of his assets and liabilities, and urged that his creditors appoint a trustee to whom all of his property, except his exemptions, might be conveyed for their benefit. While it does appear that the effect of his absence was that service of proceess could not be made upon him in South Dakota during the period of his absence, yet that does not tend to support the view contended for by appellant. The distinction between absence upon a transient journey and absence accompanied with a settled abode for the time being is pointed out in Culhane Adjustment Co. v. Farrand, 34 S. D. 87, 147 N. W. 271. In Wade on Attachment & Garnishment, § 88, the author considered generally the subject of the avoidance of process. He said:
“The statutes are, for the most part, so worded that the act, coupled with the intent, whether it be by secreting, fleeing, assuming a false name, or a disguise of the person, or by standing in defiance of the officer, will suffice. But the act itself without the intent to avoid process, however it may result for the time being, will not, as a general rule, render the property of the debtor attachable.”
In Morgan v. Avery, 7 Barb. (N. Y.) 656, the question of
“As fraud in law is insufficient t» warrant or sustain an attachment, under a statute like ours providing, in effect, that the accomplished or contemplated act of the debtor must be with the intent to defraud, hinder, or delay creditors, a sale or assignment, made or attempted by a debtor acting without moral turpitude, and in the utmost good faith, cannot, though in legal effect fraudulent and void, be made the basis for an attachment. Trebilcock v. Mining Co., 9 S. D. 206, 68 N. W. 330; 1 Wade, Attachm. 96; Commission Co. v. Druley, 156 Ill. 25, 41 N. E. 48, 30 L. R. A. 465; Shinn, Attachm. 167.”
We are satisfied from the evidence that 'defendant acted in these matters in the utmost good faith.
We are satisfied that the evidence submitted upon the motion to dissolye the attachment justified the trial court in granting such motion.
The motion for leave to file appellant’s briefs is denied.
Inasmuch as this decision leaves appellant without further remedy upon this appeal, the court does now, of its own motion, affirm the order appealed from.