88 P. 620 | Wyo. | 1907
This action was brought by the plaintiff, the defendant in error, against the defendants, the plaintiffs in error, to recover damages which he alleged he had sustained by reason of the unlawful and forcible entry of the defendants upon a certain ranch belonging to plaintiff, and ejecting his agent therefrom, and by threats and intimidation holding possession of the same, and by tearing down the fences around the hay stacks, and by consuming and destroying the hay stacked on said ranch, and by depasturing said lands. That all of said acts of defendants were wilful and malicious, and were done with intent to injure and defraud plaintiff out of his right to the possession of said ranch, and out of his property. That defendants hold said premises with force and arms, and threaten to continue to deprive plaintiff of the possession of said property. That if they are allowed to continue so to do the plaintiff will be unable to protect his personal property on said ranch or to clean out the ditches, or to repair the fences thereon, and that he will be irreparably damaged.
The petition was presented to the judge of the District Court and a preliminary injunction issued restraining the defendants from interfering with plaintiff’s possession of
A writ of attachment was issued and levied upon personal property of defendants, and they filed a motion to discharge and dissolve the attachment and also a motion to vacate the injunction. Both motions were denied by the court upon hearing, and defendants bring error.
The grounds of the motion to discharge the attachment are “that the defendants did not fraudulently or criminally contract the alleged debt, nor fraudulently or criminally incur the alleged obligation.” And “that the defendants were not about to convert their property or a part thereof into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of the creditors.” This motion was supported by the affidavit of each of the defendants in substantially the same language as that contained in the motion, and was heard upon affidavits and oral testimony offered by the parties. When the grounds for an attachment are positively denied by the defendant in the affidavit in support of the motion to discharge, the burden then rests upon the plaintiff to sustain them by additional evidence; and in this case we do not
In the case at bar we think it must be assumed for the purposes of the motion that a cause of action exists in favor of plaintiff against defendants for damages in the sum claimed for trespass and for consuming and destroying his property; and that the only question presented by the motion on this ground is, whether the acts of defendants which caused the alleged damages were in their nature fraudulent or criminal. The circumstances of the transactions out of which plaintiff’s cause of action arose, .may be enquired into although they may involve some of the facts upon the merits; but such inquiry is for the purpose of determining whether grounds for the attachment exist and not whether there is or is not a cause of action. The evidence on the charge that defendants were about to dispose of their property or a p"art thereof with intent to defraud their creditors was probably insufficient to sustain that
It is also contended by counsel for defendants that the affidavit for attachment is insufficient because, first, that in the printed part of the affidavit it states that the “defendant is” justly indebted, etc., instead of “defendants are,” etc.; second, that the facts constituting fraud and criminality are not set out; third, that in the statement of the nature of plaintiff’s claim it is not stated that the claim is founded on fraud or criminal conduct, but simply on trespass. A complete answer to these objections is that none of them were raised by the motion and they cannot, therefore, be considered. The motion contains one other ground, viz.: “that the action of the plaintiff in which the attachment was issued as appears from the petition is for the recovery of purely unliquidated damages, for which attachment proceedings will not lie.” In some of the states an attachment can issue only in actions on contract, express or implied; but our statute does not contain such limitation, and it may issue in a civil action for the recovery of money. (Sec. 3988, R. S. 1899.) It is not contended that this is not such an action. Under the Ohio statute, of which ours is a literal copy, it was held in Sturdevant v. Tuttle, 22 O. St., hi, that an attachment will lie in a civil action for the recovery of unliquidated damages for assault and battery; and that case was approved and followed in Kirk v. Whitaker, id., 115, and Cresser v. Young, 31 O. St., 57.
The only remaining assignment of error is that the court refused to hear evidence in support of a motion filed by the defendant Card, for an order requiring the sheriff to release the property attached on the ground that it was exempt from attachment. The order of the court after denying the motion to vacate the injunction, and to discharge the attachment, recites: “And thereupon the defendants by counsel asked that the court should hear the application of defendants for an order on the sheriff to release all the attached property, claiming the same to be exempt; and the court thereupon refused to hear or entertain said application at this time, for the reason that the same was not properly before the court at this time.” This is not such.a final order as can be brought to this court upon error. The application was neither sustained or denied, and for anything that appears in the record is still pending and undetermined. If the District Court without just cause has refused to act in a matter in which it is required by law to act, the remedy is not by error to this court, but by mandamus. We find nothing in the record to warrant us in disturbing the order of the District Court, and it is, therefore, affirmed. Affirmed.