Judges: Parker
Filed Date: 6/15/1897
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The papers upon which the attachment was granted were perhaps sufficient to support it on the ground that the defendant was intending to dispose of his property for the purpose- of cheating and defrauding his creditors. But on the motion to vacate the attachment certain affidavits were filed by the defendant, which, when considered in connection with the plaintiff’s papers used on the' motion, called for the vacation of the attachment. The provisional remedy of attachment is a severe one and should not be sustained when granted unless the proof fairly warrants it. This seems to he a case where this remedy, was resorted to for the purpose of obtaining an unconscionable advantage over a defendant.
The defendant prior to May 4,1897, was a manufacturer of fancy metal and glass goods at 135 West Twenty-third street, Hew York city. The plaintiff was his bookkeeper and general manager, negotiations between these men for a purchase and sale of the property had resulted in a contract dated on the day above mentioned, by which the defendant agreed to sell part of his business to the plaintiff and to make transfer on the sixth day of May, two ■ days later. The consideration agreed upon was $2,250, of which $650 was to be' paid in cash and the balance in long time notes. The plaintiff wished to retain the premises which defendant had leased, and the agreement provided that he should give a bond to secure the payment of rent to the landlord. May sixth the defendant refused to deliver the business to the plaintiff, and the reason given was, that the security for the payment of the rent proposed by the plaintiff was not satisfactory. Ho effort seems to have been made by the plaintiff to procure another surety, but two days later he commenced this action against the defendant for breach of the contract, laying his damages at $9,500, over four times the entire purchase price- of the business. In this action the attachment now before • the court was obtained, with the necessary result that the business of the defendant has ever since been tied up. ■ The affidavits upon which the attachment was issued were made by the plaintiff and one of his employees. The conversation which the plaintiff alleges
Plaintiff’s employee 'Racey, in his affidavit, states a conversation which' he says occurred on the 28th day of April, 1897, in which the defendant said “ that he was just as anxious to close the negotiations as the plaintiff was, and for the reason that he was going to leave .the State and his creditors would get nothing.” This testimony the defendant denies in the most explicit and positive manner. This denial, considered in connection with all the other facts and circumstances appearing in the papers, satisfies us that upon the motion to vacate the attachment it did not then satisfactorily appear, that the defendant had ever intended to dispose of his' property for
Order should be reversed, with ten dollars.costs, and a motion.to vacate attachment granted, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, Williams and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars, costs .and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.