11 N.Y.S. 436 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The attachment has been issued for two distinct causes of action. The first is upon an assigned demand for the price of goods sold and delivered; the second for the value of goods obtained by fraudulent representations of the financial condition of the defendants, and their practical conversion by them. In this respect the proceeding is clearly irregular, and can ■only be corrected by the dismissal of the attachment as to one of these demands, and as the first is comparatively unimportant in it*s amount, its dismissal would prove the least injurious to the plaintiffs; and if that would entirely correct the proceeding it would be proper to order that dismissal, as the two causes of action have not been properly united in the same action. But it would not, for still further objections have been taken of a fundamental character to the affidavits on which the attachment has been issued, and which this dismissal would not remove. These objections are made to the affidavit of the plaintiffs’ managing agent, by whom the sale was made -of the plaintiffs’ whisky to the defendants. The attachment was issued upon the ground, as it has been recited therein, that the defendant Henry A. Dickinson keeps himself concealed within the state with the intent to avoid the service of a summons, and that the defendants have assigned, disposed •of, or secreted their property with the intent to defraud their creditors. The proof of these facts consists wholly of the affidavit of the managing agent. As to the fact of concealment he states that he tried to find the defendant Dickinson two or three days after the confession of a judgment, which was confessed on the 18th of July, 1890; that he went to the defendants’ plaeeof business, at Ho. 15 Hudson street, and found the place in the sheriff’s hands, and the defendant Dickinson was not there, but was told by persons there that he could be found at 159 Chambers street; that he went there three or four times a day, for four days, without finding him, and left notes for him to call, to which he made no reply. And upon this statement the charge of concealment to avoid the service of the summons was made. For the support of that charge it was insufficient. Ho evidence is contained in the afiidavit that the persons at the store had any knowledge of where this defendant could be found, or that he was in fact at 159 Chambers street. They seem to have been persons acting under the sheriff, without authority to
As further proof of the fraudulent disposition or concealment of the debtors’ property, and which seems to relate to property not sold under the execution, it is stated by the same affiant that the 25 barrels of whisky sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants were within a week or two after the conversation mentioned pledged with a warehousekeeper of this city, and an advance of 75 per cent, obtained thereon. It is further stated that within three months the defendants had bought about $10,000 worth of liquors, wines, etc., all of which have immediately after the purchase, and out of the regular course of business, been hypothecated for about 75 per cent, of their value, but the goods had not been paid for, nor the proceeds received by the creditors. The affiant nowhere states that he was present at either of these transactions; neither does he disclose from what source he may have obtained information concerning them, nor the extent of such information, and as the statements relate to transactions between other persons* at neither of which can he be presumed to have been present, they furnish no reliable reason for believing that they have been correctly stated. The fact that a witness states transactions positively as being within his knowledge, when it can be seen that he does not possess that knowledge, are circumstances not only requiring the statements to be rejected, but they tend to subject his veracity in other respects to grave doubts, for it shows either a carelessness or recklessness on the part of - the person making the statements, which is wholly inconsistent with a just regard for the truth; and it has been considered in that view in cases which have already been decided. Bank v. Loucheim, 8 N. Y. Supp. 520. And if the whisky was pledged, as the affidavit states it was, there is nothing mentioned from which it can be inferred to have been done to defraud the creditors of the defendants, or to conceal the property. Indeed, no such design has been asserted in the affidavit. The affiant states further that "he has been informed-by persons holding, claims against the defendants that the total debts owing by the defendants amount to between $20,000 and $25,-000, but that from lack of time he was unable to'see these persons and procure their affidavits. This information is no proof of the facts existing to which it relates. Ueither does it appear to have been so regarded, for the affiant does not even add that he believed the information to be true. But if he had