65 N.Y.S. 250 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1900
The questions which are presented for determination in these three actions arise under the following facts and circumstances: On January 20, 1900, a summons was issued out of this court in each of the actions, and accompanying the same was a warrant of attachment issued by the clerk of the court, pursuant to the allowance thereof by the justice, as required by the statute. The
An examination of the statutes at once discloses that the undertaking does not comply with its provisions, but plaintiff has moved to amend the undertaking so as to make it comply with the requirements of the law, and has offered an amended undertaking, correct in form, with the request of the sureties that it be so amended. The defendant insists the justice has no power to allow the amendment, and this raises the interesting question as to the powers of
Section 3347, subd. 6, of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that sections 729 and 730 of the Code apply “to proceedings taken in any court, or before any officer or body.”
Section 729 of the Code reads as follows:
“A. bond or undertaking required by statute to be given by a person to entitle him to a right or privilege, or to take a proceeding, is sufficient if it conforms substantially to the form therefor prescribed by the statute, and does not vary therefrom to the prejudice of the rights of the party to whom or for whose benefit it is given.”
Section 730 reads:
“Where such bond or undertaking is defective, the court officer or body that would be authorized to receive it or to entertain a proceeding in consequence thereof, if it was perfect, may, on the application of the persons who executed it, amend it accordingly, and it shall thereupon be valid from the time of its execution.”
These sections of the Code'were passed in 1876, re-enacted 2 Rev. St. p. 556, §§ 33, 34, adding the words “or undertaking.” These provisions have been held to authorize amendments to undertakings on attachment. Kissam v. Marshall, 10 Abb. Frac. 424; Bondy v. Collier, 11 Misc. Rep. 443, 32 N. Y. Supp. 221. The office of an undertaking is not to confer jurisdiction, but to secure to the defendant security in case the person suing out the writ does so without right. Simmons Hardware Co. v. Alturas Commercial Co. (Idaho) 39 Pac. 550. That sections 729 and 730 apply to undertakings given to procure provisional remedies is settled by Dale v. Gilbert, 128 N. Y. 625, 28 N. E. 512, wherein the court of appeals reversed the decisions of the special and general terms of the supreme court, denying a motion to amend an undertaking given in replevin, on the ground of want of power. Peckham, J., in that case, speaking for the court, says:
“We think the court has the power to permit such amendment, the same as it has power to permit a correction of any other alleged error which the party states that he has inadvertently made. Whether it should be allowed or not depends upon the question whether the party in whose favor the error may have been made can be placed in the same position, substantially, which he occupied previous to its commission. * * * When an application to substitute an undertaking, or, in other words, to amend, is made, it should be presented to the court; and it will be for the court to say whether, in view of all the facts, it should be granted.”
I conclude, therefore, that the justices of the municipal courts have full power to permit amendments to defective undertakings under the sections above cited. The cases cited by the counsel for the defendant in his able brief have no application to the case at bar, as
The next question for consideration is whether the ground upon which the attachments were procured permits of an attachment, to wit, that defendant keeps herself concealed with intent to avoid the service of the' summons. Counsel for defendant contends that, as the attachment was issued to accompany the summons, there could be no concealment with intent to avoid its service; and he further contends that it is insufficient to sustain an attachment to show that a person conceals himself to avoid the service of a summons, without going further and alleging the additional intent to cheat and defraud creditors. The grounds upon which an attachment may issue out of municipal courts are regulated by section 1317 of the consolidation act, the provisions of which, so far as is here material, are:
“If the defendant is a natural person and a resident of the state, that he has departed or is about to depart from the county where he last resided, with intent to defraud his creditors, or to avoid the service of a summons, or keeps himself concealed with like intent.”
It is perfectly plain from the reading of this provision that an attachment may issue where the defendant has departed or is about to depart from the county where he last resided, with intent to defraud his creditors, or where he has departed or is about to depart from- the county where he last resided, with intent to avoid the service of a summons, and also in case he conceals himself within the county with intent to defraud his creditors, or conceals himself in the county with intent to avoid the service of a summons. I see no force in the suggestion that it must be alleged that the intent to avoid the service of the summons is with the intent to defraud the-creditors. The removal or concealment with intent to defraud creditors is a ground for the attachment alone. It is not necessary that the attempt to avoid the service of a summons should be coupled with the intent to defraud creditors, in order to justify an attachment. What reason is there, therefore, to hold that this intent to-defraud creditors, which of itself is ground for an attachment, should be required to be added to the other ground, to wit, the intent to avoid the service of a summons. In fact, the necessary result of an intent to avoid the service of a summons by removal or concealment is to delay and defeat creditors in the enforcement of their claims, which is a fraud upon them. In Easton v. Malavazi, 7 Daly, 147, an attachment issued on the ground that defendant kept himself concealed in the city with the intent to avoid the service of the summons was upheld. See, also, Hall v. Anderson, 17 Misc. Rep. 270, 40-
The next question to be considered is, what is the effect upon the proceedings on the third-party claim to some of the property attached? Does it stay the proceedings until the determination of the title to the property attached? The property attached is attached as the property of the defendant. If it is not the property of the defendant, the person whose property it is has a right of action against the marshal attaching it, and possibly against the person at whose
I therefore conclude that the defendant is properly before the court, and that, unless the defendant answers to the complaint, I will proceed to hear and determine the action.