64 Miss. 822 | Miss. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is. an attachment suit by the appellants against the appel-lees, who are merchants. The alleged grounds of attachment are, that the'defendants were about to remove their property out of the State ; that they had property or rights of action which they concealed'and refused to apply to the payment of their debts; that they had assigned or disposed of, or were about to assign or dispose of, their property, or some part thereof, with intent to defraud their creditors, and that they had converted, or were about to convert, their property into money, or evidences of debt, with intent to place it- beyond the reach of their creditors. The defendants filed a plea traversing the grounds for suing out the writ, and, after the plaintiffs had introduced their evidence on this issue, it was upon
We think the learned judge misconceived the purport of these cases. In Montague v. Gaddis the sole ground for attachment was that the defendant was about to remove his property out of this State. It was shown by the defendant that he owned three plantations, one in Lauderdale County and one in Nankin County in this State, and another in the State of Louisiana. The defendant resided in the county of Nankin, and the value of his property there (which he did not intend to remove from the State) exceeded all his liabilities in this State. It was conceded that the defendant was endeavoring to sell his Lauderdale County lands, and intended to remove the slaves from that county to his place in Louisiana. In this condition of the evidence the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that “ if it believed from the evidence that the defendant had a large property of a permanent nature and subject to execution, ample and sufficient to meet all his liabilities, and that the same was in the county of Nankin in this State at the time the attachment was sued out, which he was not about to remove, they may find for the defendant.” This instruction the lower court refused to give, and for that the judgment was reversed. The court announced the very proper rule, that where ample and visible property was reserved by the debtor in this State he was not liable to attachment merely because he was about to remove other property from the State. By such removal the creditor was not placed in any worse condition than before; the collection of his debt was not endangered nor delayed, and the principle of the statute did not apply. In Myers v. Farrell, Simrall, J., who delivered the opinion of the court, in refer
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.