Wallace and Claudia West, citizens of New Jersey, sued Charles and Susan Zurhorst, then citizens of New York, in the District Court for the Southern District of New York in July, 1966. They sought to recover damages of $19,100 allegedly sustained in the purchase of stock of and the loan of moneys to a corporation promoted by the defendants, rather appropriately named Lost Village Operations, Inc. The first count of the complaint alleged common-law fraud; the second relied on § 10 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 and the SEC’s Rule 10b-5. On the day the complaint was filed, plaintiffs obtained an ex parte order of attachment against land owned by the defendants pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 64, which provides that “at the commencement of and during the course of an action, all remedies providing for seizure of person or property for the purpose of securing satisfaction of the judgment ultimately to be entered in the action are available under the circumstances and in the manner provided by the law of the state in which the district court is held,” and New York CPLR § 6201, subd. 7 authorizing attachment when “there is a cause of action to recover damages * * * for fraud or deceit.” Later the defendants were personally served.
In pre-trial proceedings several years afterwards plaintiffs announced they would abandon the first count and rely solely on the claim under Rule 10b-5. Defendants promptly made a motion to vacate the attachment. Judge Tyler denied this, holding that an action under Rule 10b-5 was within the New York attachment statute.
1
Defendants moved for
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reargument on the basis of Judge Her-lands’ opinion in Reeder v. Mastercraft Electronics Corp.,
Defendants contend that the order is appealable as a final decision, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, under the doctrine of Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The argument has its persuasiveness. Maintenance of a lien upon property is not a negligible deprivation, cf. Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
It could be said against this that the Congresses that took these actions did not have the benefit of
Cohen’s
elucidation of “final decision”; indeed the
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ease made by the American Bar Association Committee of Judicial Administration for a statute to allow an appeal from an order appointing a receiver is only a more vigorous precursor of Mr. Justice Jackson’s language a half century later.
3
But any such argument must shatter on the rock that, in what we believe to be the Supreme Court’s only
post-Cohen
pronouncement with respect to the appealability of orders of attachment, Mr. Justice Frankfurter said that while an order vacating an attachment that afforded the sole basis for jurisdiction was appealable,
4
“the situation is quite different where an attachment is upheld pending determination of the principal claim,” citing Cushing v. Laird,
Appeal dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. The judge cited A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow,
. Jurisdiction to review denials or dissolutions of temporary injunctions was conferred four years later. 28 Stat. 666 (1895).
. “The appeal from a final decree where there has been a previous interlocutory decree appointing a receiver, with intermediate orders for the sale of the res or receivers’ certificates or, in any event, with the entire expenses of the receivership saddled on the estate, is like the justice that grants a new trial to the beheaded criminal.” 17 Am.Bar Ass’n Rep. 341 (1894), quoted in Frankfurter & Landis, supra, 39 Harv.L.Rev. at 347.
. As indicated by Judge L. Hand in Flegenheimer v. General Mills, Inc.,
. Although this case may be atypical in some respects, it illustrates how unimportant the issue may be. The Zurhorsts have moved to Connecticut and an attachment would now he authorized on the ground of non-residence, CPLR § 6201, suhd. 1. Under New York procedure, defendants may free their property of the lien by giving bond in the same amount, CPLR § 6222; indeed after appearance by defendants, the court is directed by CPLR § 6223 to vacate the attachment if it determines that it is unnecessary to the security of the plaintiffs. And the action is scheduled for early trial.
