30 Neb. 800 | Neb. | 1890
This cause comes up on error from the district court of Johnson county.
On the 18th of August, 1888, plaintiffs (who are defendants in error here) commenced an action in the district court for Johnson county against H. E. Brown, (the plaintiff in error here) to recover from him the sum of $420.60 and interest thereon. The same being due for goods and merchandise purchased from them by said Brown. At the time of commencing said action said plaintiffs-filed an' affidavit for an attachment against Brown and for garnishee process against one James D. Russell as garnishee. The two grounds alleged in the affidavit for attachment were:
First — Fraud practiced by said Brown in misrepresenting his financial standing in order to obtain the goods on credit; and,
An order of attachment was issued and notice in garnishment was served upon Russell, and certain other property was attached. A motion was made by Brown to discharge the attachment, supported by affidavits, in which it was sought to controvert the allegations in the affidavit for attachment; and afterwards the plaintiffs filed additional affidavits sustaining the original affidavit and supporting the attachment. Upon these affidavits a hearing was had by the court after Russell, as garnishee, had answered as such, and his answer was also relied upon in support of the attachment by plaintiffs; and upon this hearing the court found that the preponderance of the proof sustained the attachment, and, therefore, the motion to discharge the same was overruled, to which said Brown excepted, and brings the cause to this court by petition in error.
Although stated differentially, there is, substantially, but one error assigned, that of the overruling the motion of the plaintiff in error to discharge the attachment, in the court below. The grounds of the motion were:
1. Because the facts stated in the affidavit were not sufficient to justify the order.
2. That the statements of fact were not true.
The substantial part of the affidavit was that “ the defendant has obtained credit to said amount, and has been able to and did contract said debt by reason of fraudulently misrepresenting his financial standing, and by fraud said defendant has since, as affiant is informed, and avers the fact to be, sold and disposed of his property, or of a large part thereof, for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of, and. of cheating and defrauding, his creditors.”
Upon the trial the plaintiff offered this affidavit, and ■
This question was before the court and considered in the several cases of Morse & Co. v. Steinrod & Co., Smith & Co.
The case at bar comes .quite within the principle of this opinion. Practically a small excess of security sufficient for accruing costs and expenses, accruing interest, and possibly for a depreciation in values would be justifiable, but where the excess of security is so great as to show either an utter disregard of the rights of other creditors, or a dispor sition to cut them off from an opportunity to secure their claims, subject of course to the preference which the law ' gives to superior vigilance and activity, the giving of security on the part of the debtor, and the taking of it by the creditor’, with the knowledge of the existence of the claims of other creditors, actual or implied, must be held to be fraudulent as to them.
The first cause set up in the affidavit for attachment will not be further considered, as one sufficient ground will sustain the action, though there may be others relied upon by the plaintiff and not sustained. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.