13 Daly 171 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1885
A discretionary order made by the General Term of the City Court will not be reviewed by the Court of Common Pleas (Walsh v. Schulz, 12 Daly 103). By a discretionary order I mean one that has been made by the judge of the court below upon evidence as to the force and effect of which men of good judgment may fairly differ. In the language of Chief Justice Church, in Anonymous (59 N. Y. 315), “ when it becomes necessary to weigh conflicting evidence, to decide as to the credibility of witnesses, to consider the effect to be given to the conduct of parties, —in short any question in respect to which there is no fixed established rule or principle of law controlling it,—the order is deemed discretionary, and is not appealable to this court, although it may involve a substantial right within the meaning of that term, as used in the Code.” Again, in the case of Allen v. Meyer (73 N. Y. 1), in determining whether an order vacating an attachment was appealable to the Court of Appeals, that court said: “ An order granting an attachment is not appealable, unless it presents a question of law or absolute legal right; but if an order is granted in a case in which it is not authorized, or if there is an entire absence of facts proved justifying it, the case would present a question of law, and the order would be appealable.” In the case just cited, the court then examined the record in order to ascertain whether it presented only a question of law, and finding that the decision of the court below was dependent upon “ inferences to be drawn from the facts stated,” and upon the conclusions of the judge as to “ the degree of credit to be given to a witness,” dismissed the appeal.
Again, in Morris v. Talcott (96 N. Y. 100), the Court of Appeals, in determining the appealability of an order that
In disposing of this appeal, therefore, as we hold with respect to the City Court the position of the appellate court that reviews only questions of law, we Shall not weigh conflicting evidence, nor determine the credibility of witnesses, but shall assume the existence of those facts and conclusions that the affidavits of the plaintiff conduced to prove. Some of the affidavits offered on behalf of the defendants contain allegations that the plaintiffs have not controverted, and which do not put in dispute any averment of fact in the affidavits presented by the plaintiffs; to such of the defendants’ affidavits as are not denials of the allegations on which the plaintiffs rely for the maintenance of the attachment, reference may be made.
The question to be decided therefore is this: Upon all the proofs submitted, do the plaintiffs show prima facie that the defendant has disposed and is disposing of his property with intent to defraud his creditors ? It is a crime to dispose of property with intent to defraud one’s creditors (Penal Code § 587). I mention this, not because I rely upon the exploded doctrine that in a civil action the wrongful act must be proved beyond all reasonable doubt, but because this court, in Andrews v. Swartz (55 How. Pr. 190), and the Court of Appeals in Morris v. Talcott (96 N. Y. 100), have held that “a party seeking a remedy against another, based upon the alleged commission of a fraud by such person, must show affirmatively facts and circumstances necessarily tending to establish a probability of guilt in order to maintain his claim. When the evidence is capable of an interpretation which makes it as consistent with the innocence of the accused party as with his guilt, the meaning must be ascribed to it which accords with his innocence rather than that which imputes to him a criminal intent.”
The affidavit of Lumley, sworn to on December 26th, 1883, alleges that on the day before Christmas of that year the defendant said that he could not pay the plaintiffs’ claim, or even a part of it; that he did not know the amount' of his indebtedness, or the amount of his stock; that he could not say how he stood financially; that he had not looked over his books; that he had been sued on two claims, and that the actions were then pending; and that he had been making some small payments to parties down town, though he could not name the parties to whom the payments had been made,' nor the sums paid to them. Having thus given his conversation with the defendant, Lumley then alleges that the defendant has been daily making sales of his property for cash, and retaining the proceeds for his own, use. It is not alleged that the sales were made in an unusual manner, or that they were out of the ordinary course of business, or for less than the actual value of the goods, or that they were any other than the ordinary daily transactions of a retail dealer in the regular prosecution of his business. It is not alleged that the sales were large or that the amounts received Avere greater than the defendant required for his ordinary household expenses and the current expenses of his store. We have no bankruptcy laAV now in force, and it would be strange if a man could be convicted of making a fraudulent disposition' of his property on proof that he paid his current expenses out of the proceeds of an unprofitable business. It is finally alleged that within the preceding tAVO Aveeks the defendant has dis
The fact that the defendant did not replenish Ms stock would not, even if proved, show that the defendant was making away with it. But it is shown by the affidavit of Alexander Lumley, sworn to on January 7th, 1884, and by the affidavit of Moses Einstein, sworn to on January 10th, 1884, that the defendant bought goods of the plaintiffs in December, 1883, the very time at which it is said by Lumley, in his first affidavit, that he was not replenishing his stock. Again, it appears by the affidavit of Robert P. Johnson that during the holiday season goods are seldom bought by retailers, the object of every shopkeeper being to get rid
But tMs is not all. I think that the defendant might confidently have relied for Ms defense upon the failure of the plaintiffs to make out even a prima facie case of fraud, but he did not do so. He made an affidavit, in which he alleged that, in the month of December, 1888, he had actually paid over three thousand dollars to Ms creditors, and to that affidavit he annexed a schedule of those payments. The plaintiffs undertook to prove that that affidavit was false, but their inquiries strongly confirm its truth. They found only one mistake in it—a payment that the defendant said was made in the early part of December was actually made on the 30th of November, and the amount was not $370.75 but $360.77." Some of the defendant’s creditors refused to inform the plaintiffs’ agent when they received their money, but several of them did consent to give the information that was sought, and in every instance, save the one I have referred to, it appeared that the defendant, instead of laying money aside for Ms own use, was steadily paying his debts. It further appeared that the defendant, after the levy of the attachment, made an assignment for the benefit of Ms creditors, and that the assignee has taken possession of goods in defendant’s store worth at least $13,000. A deputy sheriff, who caused an appraisal of a part of the stock to be made, says that the part so appraised is worth nearly $5,000. There is no pretense that the assignment is fraudulent. It is clear, therefore, that the defendant was paying his creditors during the month of December, 1883, and there is every reason .to believe that he paid out to them in that month about $3,000; that he was conducting his business in the ordinary way, at retail; that he had on hand when he failed goods of the value of $13,000; and there is no proof whatever that any part of his stock was secretly sent away, or sold out of the ordinary course of business. The assignment is of itself conclusive proof in this case—for it is not assailed—that the goods on hand will
The order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the attachment should be vacated, with costs.
Larremore and J. F. Daly, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with costs.