Judges: Daniels, Davis, Ready
Filed Date: 5/15/1882
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The motion to discharge the order of arrest was made on the plaintifE’s papers. The action was brought by the plaintiff to. recover for moneys expended for the support and maintenance of the wife of the defendant for a senes of years, during which time she had been abandoned without any provision having .been made for her by her husband.
The facts are that the defendant was married to the plaintifE’s daughter in November, 1866, and lived with her at Scranton, Pennsylvania, until September, 18when he suddenly and without any notification of his intention to do so, and without cause or provoeacation, and when his wife was sick and in need of medical attention, fled from Scranton in company with a woman of that place, alleged to be of unchaste repute. After diligent and persevering search on the part of his wife, assisted by the police and by an advertisement, the defendant was traced to Detroit, Michigan, where, upon discovering that his wife had traced him to that place and was pursuing him, he fled to Elyria, Ohio, thence to Canada and
In the letter written by the woman with whom he left Scranton,
This is prwna faoie sufficient, and the appropriation of property' made by him, taken in connection with his flight, to show a fixed determination on the part of the defendant so to arrange his affairs and dispose of his property in contemplation of his liability as a husband, as to defraud his creditors who might supply his wife with necessaries, and would seem to be sufficient therefore under the section of the Code in contemplation. There is, however, another, feature in this case, namely, the fraud perpetrated by the defendant in reference to his implied contract. “ The test of the liability to arrest in such an action,” said ANDREWS, J., in Hathaway v. Johnson (55 N. Y., 95), “is the guilt of the defendant in contracting the debt or incurring the obligation sued upon. There must have been a fraudulent purpose in contracting the debt or incurring the liability on the part of the defendant.” And these observations would seem to apply as well to the removal of the property as to fraud in incurring the obligation. The defendant, by secretly leaving Scranton, without cause or provocation, with the intention of separating from his wife, and with the further intention of making no provision for her support, and abandoning her, and thus making it necessary for some person to supply her wants, incurred the obligations which the furnishing or selling such supplies would create. This was a fraudulent scheme, involving a preconceived design of incurring an obligation which he did not mean to discharge. I am aware that this may be regarded as extending the doctrine of frauds beyond its ordinary limits. But the implied contract to pay at once, created by the defendant’s abandonment, was conceived in fraud, and carried out'in the same spirit, as indicated by the sudden and secret flight, and by appropriation of property, and by “ fixing matters,” to use the language of the letter to which reference has been made, in such a way as to prevent success in the effort to collect the amount which might become due from him for necessaries furnished his wife. The contract to pay for them is implied; the intention to avoid the payment is clear, and the preconceived design palpable. The conduct of the defendant presents, in support of this view — sudden and clan
. The order of arrest should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and the disbursements of the appeal.
From the manner in which the defendant abandoned his wife he must have been aware of the fact that her necessities could only be provided for by contracting debts on his own or her credit. The law empowered her to create debts for such purposes against him, and that she appears to have done. These debts in legal contemplation were His debts, and there is evidence in the case that he disposed of, or in the language of the letter of his paramour he had fixed, his property so that it could not be appropriated to the payment of such debts. This was a fraud upon the persons who, upon his credit, might trust his 'wife for such necessaries as were required for her support; and that brought the case within subdivision 2 of section 550 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for it established the fact that he had disposed of his property with intent to defraud his creditors. I agree, therefore, to the conclusion of Mr. Justice Bbady that the order denying the motion to vacate the order of arrest should be affirmed.