Ketchum v. Vidvard

Mullin, P. J.

The attachment in this case was issued pursuant to the provisions of the non-imprisonment act (Laws 1831, chap. 300, §§ 34^39), so called, and not pursuant to the provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to the commencement of suits in justices’ courts, by attachment. 2 R. S. 230, §§ 26-38.

By the former provisions, an attachment might issue whenever it was made to appear to the satisfaction of the justice that the *140defendant was about to remove from the county any of his property with intent to defraud his creditors, or has assigned, etc., any of his property with like intent, whether such defendant' be a resident of this State or not.

The specific objection to the affidavit on which the attachment issued is, that it does not state that Clark had left the county where he last resided, or that he was about to remove from the county any of his property. Whether Olark had or had not left the county, was matter of no moment, as the attachment was not issued under the section of the Revised Statutes above referred to.

What county is intended in this section of the non-imprisonment act, where the applicant is required to prove, to the satisfaction of the justice, that the defendant is about to remove from the county any of his property, is not quite clear. If the defendant is a non-resident of the State as he may be and yet be proceeded against under this provision of the statute, it would be difficult to ascertain the county in this State in which he last resided. It would seem to me the county intended is the county in which the process is applied for, and that it is not necessary that the plaintiff should prove that the removal of property was from the county where the defendant last resided.

There is another answer to the objection. The affidavit, taken all together, contains evidence which justifies the justice in finding that the county of Oneida was the county where the defendant last resided. The affiant says: “that Olark has left the county of Oneida, and removed his property therefrom, with intent, etc.; said Olark is indebted in considerable amounts to sundry persons, and has recently, secretly, and in a clandestine manner, absconded from the county of Oneida and taken his goods and property with him and does not intend to return thereto, but has gone to the west to reside.”

It is true the facts sworn to might be true and yet the defendant be a resident of some other county, but the question is, what was the justice authorized to infer the party intended in view of the statutory requirement F

If the justice might construe the affidavit as meaning that the county of Oneida was the last place of residence of the defendant, the justice acquired jurisdiction, and the attachment cannot be held void in a collateral proceeding. 2 Wait’s L. & P. 14, 139 and 144. and cases cited.

*141It is also objected that the facts are stated in the affidavit on information and belief. The clause as to the intent with which the defendant removed his property is, as it may properly be, on information and belief, and that defendant had gone west to reside is also on information and belief, as it may also be properly stated, and these are the only allegations that are thus made, according to my construction of the affidavit.

The plaintiff sought to recover three distinct descriptions of property ; first, that which belonged to Trolon, the landlord, and on which plaintiff held a lien; second, some tobacco that he had purchased after the purchase from Clark, and third, the property he had purchased from Clark.

He recovered a verdict for the property of Trolon, as appears from the prices given by the witnesses to the property. It is probable that he did not recover for the tobacco he purchased after he bought out Clark. And it is quite certain he did recover for any property he bought of Clark. That sale was held by the jury, I doubt not, as fraudulent as to the creditors of Clark. A verdict sustaining that sale would have been set aside as against the weight of evidence. The learned judge did not express himself any too forcibly when he declared it to be in his opinion fraudulent and void.

The only question now to be considered is, whether the plaintiff proved himself entitled to recover for the tobacco. It was not disputed on the trial but that plaintiff bought thirty-nine pounds of smoking tobacco of Prequits after the purchase from Clark, which was in bags in the store when the levy was made, and is included in the inventory made at the time of the seizure on the attachment, and no other tobacco is included in that inventory except one and a half pounds smoking tobacco.

On this proof the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the tobacco. On the part of the defendant it was claimed, and the court seemed to be of the opinion, that these thirty-nine pounds were mingled in some way with other tobacco which was lawfully seized, and the parcels became so mingled as to be indistinguishable, and the plaintiff lost his title as against the officer. This cannot be so. When it was levied on it was certainly separate, because it was inventoried by its weight as one parcel. If it afterward became mingled with other tobacco, it was after the conversion and through the fault of the officer or of some one acting with him.

Prequits sold this tobacco to plaintiff in part, at least, on the *142responsibility of Clark. If the plaintiff held the property as a mere cover for Clark, and it was still Clark’s notwithstanding the sale to plaintiff, that question should have been submitted to the jury, but this thirty-nine pounds of tobacco was not referred to by the court in his charge, as embraced in the property fraudulently sold to the plaintiff. The court charged the jury that it was for the plaintiff to identify the tobacco from other tobacco in the store, before he can recover for it. “ Did he put it with other tobacco into drawers, or was it kept in papers, how was it in regard to that P Did he sell a portion of it if you please, on the day the circus was there, and how much of it ? Gentlemen, I do not know as you can find it, if you cannot, the plaintiff has no complaint to make. It is not for you, I think, to say that he shall recover for thirty-nine pounds of tobacco, unless he has identified it and set it apart, because you don’t know from the evidence here but what a portion of this thirty-nine pounds was sold, and quite a portion too, on the day of the circus. We do not know.”

The plaintiff’s counsel excepted to that portion of the charge wherein was charged that it was a matter for the plaintiff to identify the tobacco not bought of Olark;

It will be seen the exception does not reach the error in the charge; the plaintiff’s claim was that if the sale from plaintiff to Olark was fraudulent, still he was entitled to recover for the thirty-nine pounds of tobacco bought by himself, after the sale by Olark from Prequits. It was wholly immaterial where or in what condition the tobacco bought of Clark was.

It was doubtless incumbent on the plaintiff to show that this tobacco was levied on, and he did show it, and showing it was entitled to recover for it, and the charge as to mingling it with other tobacco had no relevancy to the merits of the question.

I am of the opinion that the jury was misled by the charge, but as there is no exception to the charge that reaches the error, we must affirm the judgment.

Judgment affirmed.