The plaintiff in error insists that sufficient facts are not stated in the affidavits of Beach and Lawrence to confer jurisdiction upon the judge, as it is only alleged on information and belief that Mosher had property and rights in action fraudulently concealed, &c.
In the case of Collamer v. Elmore, decided by this court in May last, all the cases on the subject of warrants issued under the act to abolish imprisonment for debt and under our attachment laws were examined. In that case, the question arose in an action of assault and battery and false imprisonment, in which the defendant sought to defend himself under a warrant issued by a supreme court commissioner, under the same sections of the act by virtue of which the present warrant was issued; and a majority of the court held the warrant no protection, because the applicant merely swore that the original defendant had certain credits, as he was informed and believed, which he unjustly refused to apply. I thought the warrant sufficient to protect the party,“whatever might have been the fate of it if tested by a certiorari. A majority of the court thought otherwise, and their opinion was based mainly upon the fact that the affidavit of the creditor did not disclose “ any facts and circumstances,” beyond his information and belief, of the existence of those credits. The present case is different from that, inasmuch, as we have the additional affidavit of the deputy sheriff, deposing to facts and circumstances' which lay the foundation for the belief that the judgment debt- or, a short time before, was the owner of a span of colts; that he had parted with them to some one ; and that the consideration for which they were sold existed in the hands of some body, in the shape of an indebtedness therefor to the judgment debtor; and that he refused to apply the avails of such property on the execution, but fraudulently concealed the same. These facts and circumstances justified the attorney in swearing to bis belief, that the judgment debtor had rights in action which he fraudulently concealed and unjustly refused to apply on the debt, and he refers expressly to the affidavit of the deputy as the ground of that belief. The debtor had an opportunity to *578controvert these facts and circumstances, by his own oath or otherwise, but refused to do so. Every intendment, therefore, should be made against him, that can be legitimately drawn from the facts disclosed. If, for example, he had never owned the colts, or if the avails of them had been applied to the payment of some other debt, or had been consumed in the support of his family, the fact was within the debtor’s own knowledge, and there is no hardship in presuming against him, if he refuses to give the requisite explanation or denial. The foregoing views are substantially conformable to the opinion of Bronson, J. in The People v. The Recorder of Albany, (6 Hill, 429, 431.) In that case, however, the proceeding was based solely upon the affidavit, of the creditor, which was deemed defective because it stated the debtor’s property- and rights in action in the alternative: thus, “ that the debtor has rights in action, or some interest in some public or corporate stocks, money, or evidences of debt.” The affidavit therefore, presented no distinct allegation on which an issue could be taken, nor could perjury be assigned upon it,
An examination of the cases which have been reviewed in this court by certiorari, will enable us to extract the rule which should govern in these summary proceedings. In Talman v. Bigelow, (10 Wend. 420,) the certiorari was to a justice’s court, brought to reverse his proceedings in granting an attachment, under 2 R. S. 230, § 28. And they were reversed because the creditor merely swore from “ reports and information,” and the two witnesses “ that they had been informed,” &c. In Smith v. Luce, (14 Wend. 237,) the proceedings before a justice in awarding an attachment under the act of 1831 (the non-im prisonment act) were reversed, for the sole reason that the grounds of complaint were stated upon the belief of the party, without setting up the facts and circumstances on which that belief was founded. In the Matter of Faulkner, (4 Hill, 598,) the question arose on a motion to set aside an attachment granted by a circuit judge under the act relative to absconding debtors. The motion was denied, because facts and circumstances were stated in the affidavit tending to establish the *579grounds of the application, and fairly calling on the officer for an exercise of his judgment on the weight of the evidence. The court held that in such case, though he erred in his estimate of it, the proceedings were not void for lack of jurisdiction. In Ex parte Haynes, (18 Wend. 611,) proceedings under the same act were set aside because the affidavits were upon information and belief. And in Ex parte Robinson, (21 Wend. 671,) the proceedings were reversed on certiorari, although the deponents swore positively to the requisite fact, but did not disclose the facts and circumstances upon which the general affirmation was predicated. (See also Connell v. Lasscells, 20 Wend. 77.) In Fulton v. Heaton, (1 Barb. Sup. Court Rep. 572,) this court held an affidavit sufficient to justify an attachment, when it stated positively the facts and circumstances, with respect to the debtor’s intent to leave the county and go to Canada, although the intent of the debtor was sworn to only from belief. It was so held also in Johnson v. Moss, (20 Wend. 145.)
From the foregoing cases we may extract the following rules: 1. That an affidavit, made by the creditor or an indifferent person, must swear positively to the facts and circumstances which are relied upon as the foundation of the warrant. 2. That the facts and circumstances must be of such a character as to tend to prove the ground on which the process is asked for. 3. That the intent of the debtor may be shown by the belief of the creditor or his agent, when the requisite facts and circumstances are positively proved. And to these, it is believed, we may add,'4. That in forming his judgment that the allegations of the applicant are established, and that the defendant has done or is about to do any of the acts specified in the 4th section of the act, some weight is due to the omission of the defendant to answer or explain the facts and circumstances relied upon, if they appear to have been within his personal knowledge.
Tested by the foregoing rules the decision of the commissioner was right in this case, and should be affirmed.(a)
Decision of the first judge of Saratoga common pleas affirmed.
See Broadhead v. McConnell, (3 Barb. Sup. Court Rep. 176,) as to the insufficiency of an affidavit founded on information and belief.