70 N.Y.S. 936 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
Among the other grounds it is contended upon this appeal that the complaint does not show sufficient facts to constitute the cause of action set forth in the warrant, i. e., injury to personal property in consequence of fraud; that the papers on attachment failed to disclose any intent on the part of the defendant Lyman, to defraud his creditors; and that the warrant itself does not comply with the provisions of section 641 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in that it does not recite any grounds for the attachment.
In support of the first contention, it is pointed out that the complaint alleges in the first cause of action that the stock in question is worthless now •— not that it was worthless when purchased — and that the second cause of action does not allege that the stock was worthless when accepted by Leszensky. This contention, we think, affords no ground for vacating the attachment. We think it obvious, as the respondent says, from a reading of the complaint, “ that the allegation of worthlessness is directed generally to the stock as a condition inherent in it from its inception, otherwise the allegations set out at great length in the complaint of the false representations made prior to the purchase by the plaintiff of the said shares, would have no application and be meaningless.” And as' to the second cause of action the allegation is that “ said certificates (when accepted) then were, ever since have been and now are worthless and of no value.” Section 3343 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 10, defines an injury to property as “ an actionable act, whereby the estate of another is lessened, other than a personal injury, or the breach of a contract.” ' It is manifest that the acts here complained of constitute a lessening of the estate of the plaintiff and Ins assignor, the gravamen of the complaint being the taking away from the plaintiff of' sums of money by means of fraud. That he has a cause of action, therefore, against defendant is made to appear.
It must be remembered, moreover, m construing both the com
Keeping this rule in mind, we think it is impossible, upon reading the affidavits in behalf of the plaintiff, to conclude, as the appellant contends, that they fail to disclose any intent on the part of the defendant to defraud his creditors. The affidavits show that Dr. Lyman was not to'be found on the twenty-second or twenty-third of March at his home or office or through his attorney, and that contradictory messages had been given as to whether he was away or was at home sick, and the office boy said he had come into the office for something and gone away at once; that persons to whom he owed-money had searched for him in vain ; that the paper had published an account of his absconding, and his attorney had failed to throw any light upon the subject or even to arrange for an appointment, and the sheriff had not succeeded in executing an order of arrest. What was said in Stevens v. Middleton (26 Hun, 470) is peculiarly applicable here, that “it is not always practicable to establish by proof the existence of a fraudulent intent on the part of the debtor even when in reality it exists. Direct proof of the fact can rarely be obtained, and when it is established it must ordinarily be inferred from circumstances. The facts as they are disclosed m this case, in the absence of any explanation on the part of the debtor, justify the inference that his movements were prompted by the intent alleged in the attachment. It is sufficient that such an inference was warranted by the circumstances, and as that was their effect the motion to discharge the attachment was properly denied by the court.”
The question which the appellant thus presents has been thoroughly discussed and, as we think, correctly decided in the case of Garson v. Brumberg (75 Hun, 336) wherein the requirements of a warrant of attachment both as to allegations regarding the disposition of property with intent to defraud creditors, and as to the absence of a debtor from the State or his concealment therein with intent to defraud creditors were defined, and it was held as to the former that a disjunctive statement was defective, but as to the latter it was not, the court saying: “ The removal of property with the intent to defraud creditors is one ground, and the assignment of it with like intent is another; but they are based upon different facts and both cannot well be included in or established by the same facts, whilst under the other provision of the Code the intent to defraud creditors or to avoid the service of a summons, may be
Apart from'the fact that the remedy might, under the construction for which the appellant contends, be eliminated m certain cases, the real objection to such a construction is that the wrong which the issuance of the warrant is intended to redresss is the concealment of the debtor with intent to defraud his creditors. Whether the concealment is within or without the State is a mere incident. The provision of the Code must be read so as to afford the creditor a remedy when the debtor with intent to defraud remains in concealment. The casé of Cronin v. Crooks (supra) and like cases, upon which the appellant relies, are clearly distinguishable. Therein the attachment was sought upon the ground of fraudulent disposition of property, and the recital in the warrant was that the debtor had
In other words, if a man has assigned, he is not about to assign his property,' whereas with regard to the question of concealment with intent to defraud creditors, a recital that the debtor has departed from the State or remains concealed therein with such intent, are not mutually exclusive but tend to support the fact needed to be established, namely, that he remains in concealment in one place or the other with intent to defraud.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Patterson, McLaughlin, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.