42 Kan. 403 | Kan. | 1889
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only question involved in this case is whether the judge of the district court of Allen county, at
“That said defendants, J. W. McClure and Wm. H. McClure, are about to convert their property, or a part thereof, into money, for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of their creditors, and have property and rights in action which they conceal, and are about to assign, remove and dispose of their property, or a part thereof, with the intent to defraud, hinder and delay their creditors, and fraudulently contracted the debt and incurred the liability and obligation for which the above-named suit has been brought.”
Immediately afterward the aforesaid order of attachment was levied upon the defendants’ goods as their property, and immediately afterward the goods were replevied by Thomas K. Hanna & Co., and were permitted to remain in the hands of the defendants. On April 26, 1887, the defendants executed a second chattel mortgage upon their goods to others of their creditors, not including the plaintiffs, to secure the sum of $5,686.06; and they also about the same time executed a real-estate mortgage to secure still other debts to others of their creditors, not including the plaintiffs.
On May 13, 1887, the defendants filed a motion to dissolve the attachment, the principal grounds for such dissolution being that the grounds set forth by the plaintiffs in their affidavit for their order of attachment were not true; and on May 14, 1887, the defendants filed an affidavit sustaining their motion, and setting forth that the grounds set forth in the plaintiffs’ aforesaid affidavit for their order of attachment
I. The plaintiffs claim that the defendants’ motion to dissolve the attachment should have been overruled, and the attachment sustained, for the reason that the defendants filed a false answer setting forth that they'had paid the note sued on, when in fact they had not done so. And this claim was made upon the further claim that the filing of such false answer tended to hinder and delay these plaintiffs in the collection of their debt. Of course the filing of a false answer, when it is known to be false, is an inexcusable wrong, but it is not every wrongful act on the part of a debtor, operating to hinder or delay a creditor in the collection of his debt, that will authorize or sustain an attachment. The hindering or delaying of a creditor in the collection of his debt must, in order to be sufficient to authorize or uphold an attachment, be in some manner connected with the disposition of the debtor’s property, as by his assigning it, or removing it, or disposing of it in some other manner, or by his being about to so dispose of it or some part thereof with the intent to hinder or delay his creditors. (Tootle v. Coldwell, 30 Kas. 125; Civil Code, § 190.) In this case there was no attempt or intent on the part of the defendants to in any manner dispose of their property, except for the laudable purpose of paying their debts or of securing their payment.
II. It is also claimed by the plaintiffs that the attachment ought to be sustained on the ground that the defendants executed the aforesaid chattel mortgages. This is certainly not a sufficient ground for an attachment, for these chattel mortgages were executed in the best of faith and to secure a large proportion of the defendants’ creditors, and not with any intent
III. The plaintiffs further claim that the judge of the court below erred in dissolving the attachment, for the reason that the chattel mortgages conveyed the property away from the defendants to Thomas K. Hanna & Co. and other creditors of the defendants, and therefore that the defendants had no sufficient interest in the property to authorize them to make a motion to dissolve the attachment. The defendants, however, continuously had the possession of the property from the first, and continued to dispose of the same for the purpose of paying their debts, and this up to the time when the motion to dissolve the attachment was heard; and all this was with the consent of Thomas K. Hanna & Co. and the other mortgagees; and besides, the plaintiffs have no reason to complain of the order of the judge as to the property, for their entire attachment was vacated and dissolved, and they therefore could not have any right or interest in or to this property or to any other property under such attachment, and it could therefore make no difference to them, so far as the attachment is concerned, as to which should have the possession of the property, the mortgagees or the defendants. But if it could make any difference to the plaintiffs, it would probably be
We do not think that the judge of the court below committed any error in dissolving the attachment, and therefore his oi’der in that regard will be affirmed.