30 How. Pr. 339 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1864
It is now claimed that no fact appeared upon the face of the papers upon which such last motion was made, different from those on which the first motion to vacate the order of arrest was denied, or that if there wére any, no excuse is given for not furnishing them on the first motion. This, of course, raises the question of the propriety of the grant of leave to renew the prior motion, or perhaps, rather, to vacate the previous order made on snob motion. It is undoubtedly
But in fact the last order does not dispose of the motion, to renew which, it recites that leave had been granted; it merely reduces the amount of bail; while the previous order does no.t expressly dispose of any motion to that effect, but merely denies the motion to set aside the order of arrest. It is true, the affidavit of the plaintiff states that the motion to discharge the order of arrest was denied after argument, as appeared by a copy of the order made therein, annexed to such affidavit, and that the counsel for the defendant Spalding, “ then moved the court to reduce the bail, which motion was also denied.” Construing this strictly, it would appear that the latter motion was not denied until after the order was made denying the former. But it does not appear how it was denied; no order is before us denying It, which is the only mode of judicially determining such a motion. A mere oral decision, if it ever took place, is of no avail without an order making it a record. The plaintiff never seems to have sought to make it a record by amending the original order, or procuring a new order to be entered. It is very dangerous in any case to rely on affidavits of parties as to what a court has decided, even counsel being sometimes mistaken. In this case the motion appears to have been heard on the llth of last February, and the order was made five days afterwards. It is not probable that a motion to reduce the bail was made, or argument had thereon after such order" was made, or that the plaintiff was present when the decision of the court was made. We are not, therefore, at liberty to assume that, the motion to reduce the bail was
But even if it were requisite that the order denying the motion to vacate the order of arrest should be vacated, and liberty given to renew it upon new facts, before a motion could be heard to reduce the bail, there were additional facts in such affidavits beyond what was before the court on the previous occasion. In the first place, the defendant denies specifically the various representations wherewith he was charged in the plaintiff’s affidavit on
Lastly, in regard to the merits ; the plaintiff sold a stock of goods to the defendant Spalding and his own son’s wife, on representations by the former as to his property, which are claimed to be false. Such sale was conditional upon the payment by the vendees of a bond executed by them according to its terms. Such bond was conditioned to pay a certain sum in ten years, with interest quarter-yearly. The goods were sold to become part of a partnership stock, to be sold and disposed of by the vendees in a regular course of business. The defendant paid two-quarters interest, and executed a mortgage on his undivided half of the
Upon every ground the order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.