The second subdivision of section 292 of the Code of Procedure is analogous to the second subdivision of section 8, of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt, and to punish fraudulent debtors, passed April 26, 1831. To obtain a warrant under the latter act and subdivision, satisfactory evidence must be adduced to the officer applied to therefor, that the debtor has property which he unjustly refuses to apply to the payment of the judgment set forth, and under the former act and subdivision after the issuing of an execution against property, upon proof to the satisfaction of the judge granting the order, that any judgment-debtor has property which he unjustly refuses to apply towards the satisfaction of the judgment, such judge may by order require the judgment-debtor to appear at a specified time and place to answer concerning the same. The proceeding referred to under the act of 1831, has been considered as a statute execution, reaching property which is not subject to seizure b y fieri facias, and such as through the fraud of the debtor, either has been, or is in danger of being placed *186beyond the reach of the ordinary process, per Jewett, Ch. J. (Steward a. Biddlecum, 2 Coms., 107; see also Sackett a. Newton, 10 How. Pr. R., 560), and it was held that the applicant under this statute must make out a plain case. (The People ex rel. Van Yalkenburgh a. The Recorder of Albany, 6 Hill, 429.) I think the same obligation rests upon the applicant under the Code. The proceeding is one in aid of the execution, and the evidence submitted should show that the debtor has property which he unjustly refuses to apply to the payment of the judgment sought to be enforced. Where the circumstances disclosed are such as to justify the presumption that the debtor operating through another, is carrying on business for his own benefit, owning the property with which such business is done, the creditor should be left to the proceeding subsequent to the return of the execution, when by the interposition of a receiver the whole subject may be investigated. The affidavit on which the order herein was obtained is entirely speculative, and may be summed up briefly thus : that there is a place of business in this city, conducted by the son of the defendant, the merchandise and stock and property of which the plaintiff is informed the defendant has had, and still has, or has an interest therein. This is not a plain case. It does not show that the defendant has any property free from claims of third persons, which he refuses to apply to the payment of his debts. On the contrary, the affidavit discloses the fact that the son of the defendant, who had charge of the alleged place of business, informed the sheriff that the defendant had no property therein. I think the order should have been discharged, and that the motion for that purpose made should have been granted.
The order in this case was not granted upon the return of the original execution, and the plaintiff having made application under subdivision 2, of section 292 of the Code, should be confined to his remedy under that subdivision.
The first execution bad been returned about fifteen years, and had ceased, I think, to be operative, for the purposes of the section referred to. See Corning, &c., a. Stebbins (1 Barb. Ch. R., 589.)
Order appealed from affirmed, with $10 costs.