The rule, prior to the Code, was well settled that a creditor could not restrain the debtor from disposing of his property until he had exhausted his remedy at law by judgment and execution. It was expressly held that an attaching creditor, under the absent-debtor act, could not move to set aside a judgment alleged to have been fraudulently confessed until trustees were appointed. (Fort a. Fort, 9 Wend., 442.) In Wintringham a. Wintringham (20 Johns., 296), the court refused to set aside a judgment confessed, or to stay execution, on the ground of fraud, at the instance of a creditor at large, whose debt had not been legally ascertained by judgment. In Reubens a. Joel (3 Kern., 488) it was, however, supposed that the Code has so modified this rule as to embrace this case (§ 219).
An injunction-order may be made when it shall appear by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, and such relief, or any part thereof, consists in restraining the commission or continuance of some act, the commission or continuance of which, during the litigation, would produce *222injury to the plaintiff. Is the case embraced by this clause of the statute ? In other words, has this provision of the statute changed the pre-existing rule touching the character of the evidence to be produced to entitle the plaintiff to call in question the acts of the debtor relating to his property ? I think it has not. The complaint does not show that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, as it does not show that he is a judgment-creditor, and until he shows himself a judgment-creditor, he has no right to call in question the judgment which George B. Stone has against Richard B. Stone. It may be that he will not be able to recover a judgment, or if he does, perhaps Richard B. Stone will pay it. In either case, this action will be useless,—unnecessary. The law has clearly settled the question, under what circumstances a plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in this case, and it is when he comes as a judgment-creditor, his remedy at law having been exhausted. I think Reubens a. Joel is, in principle, in point. The circumstances are not precisely the same. But in that case, the plaintiff was, as alleged, a creditor at large, and complained of an assignment by his debtors to defraud creditors, and sought to set it aside. The act complained of was past, though it is also alleged in the complaint, that a portion of the property assigned was about to be disposed of and sold, and an injunction was demanded as a part of the relief, to restrain the defendant from selling or disposing of the assigned property. Upon a demurrer to the complaint, judgment was for the defendant, and affirmed in the Court of Appeals.
Present, Marvin, Davis, and Grover, JJ.