29 A.D. 436 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The action was brought to recover from the defendant the sum of $3,600, which the plaintiffs lent to the defendant on the 3d of Jan
This was practically the testimony upon which the order of arrest was granted. It is criticised by the defendant because, as he says, there is no sufficient evidence of the falsity of the representations, and no proof that the defendant had not, at the time he made the representations, such a judgment. .The papers are to be construed in the light of the fact that there is nothing in the case to take away whatever probative effect they may have. The defendant has not seen fit to contradict anything stated in them, and, therefore, the plaintiffs are entitled to the benefit of all facts that may fairly be inferred from them. I( is conceded by the papers that the representations were made, and that the money was advanced to-the defendant upon the faith of them. This he does not contradict. But he says there is no evidence that the representations were not true. Upon that point it is admitted, by not contradicting it, that, when he made the representations as to the judgment, he stated that Eoiard was his attorney and.had procured it; and it is admitted that inquiries at the office of Eoiard elicited at that place, from one who was in charge of the office, that the result of the suit was not a judgment in favor of the defendant here, but a judgment against him. These facts are not disputed, and it will not-do for the defendant, who referred the plaintiffs to-his attorney for information as to his judgment, to say, when they present that information to the court for its action, that it does not afford sufficient proof of the facts which it authorized the plaintiffs to obtain at that place.
The plaintiffs were not called upon to give any reasons why they did not present the affidavit of Eoiard or of Elyde. They were not required to present those affidavits. Eoiard was the person to whom they had been referred for information, and they were entitled to bring to the court the information which they had received from him and ask the court to act upon it. If the information were not true, it would have been very easy for the defendant to say so ; and, as he has not seen fit to say so, it must be deemed that he is satisfied with the facts and only complains of the manner in which they are proved.
It is complained also by the defendant that the plaintiffs do not
For these reasons the order appealed from must be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to vacate the order of arrest must he denied, with ten dollars costs.
Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.