—The action is to recover the amount of a promissory note made by the defendant.
I. The affidavit on which the attachment was obtained is insufficient. Hot a fact is stated which could justify the process, except upon information and belief. The sources of the information—the persons from whom it was obtained—rare not named, much less is any affidavit furnished made by any such person. (St. Amant a. De Beixcedon, 3 Sandf., 703 ; Furman a. Walter, 13 How. Pr., 348 ; Blason a. Bruno, 21 Ib., 112.)
H. I consider the rule to be settled, that it is only when a motion to discharge an attachment is made on affidavits on the *78part of the defendant, that the plaintiff can support his case by additional affidavits. (Genin a. Tompkins, 12 Barb., 265 ; Wilson a. Britton, 6 Abbotts’ Pr., 33 ; Mr. Justice Bonney’s statement of the rule of the Supreme Court in this district in the case of Dickenson a. Benham, 10 Ib., 390, and 19 How. Pr., 410 ; Gen. T., Dickenson a. Benham, 12 Abbotts’ Pr., 138 ; S. C., 20 How. Pr., 343; N. Y. Superior Ct., Sp. T., Granger a. Schwartz, 11 N. Y. Leg. Obs., 346.)
' The last clause of section 241 of the Code was adopted in April, 1857, and provides, “ that, in all cases, the defendant may move to discharge the attachment as in the case of other provisional remedies.” He then moves, not upon giving security, but upon the law and merits of the case.
The language appears to indicate not merely that he may move, as in the case of an .arrest, for example, but also that he is to move under similar rules and provisions. The rule is quite clear, that in cases of arrest or injunction, affidavits to support the plaintiff’s case are inadmissible where the defendant moves on the original papers merely.
But in the case of Dickenson a. Benham (20 How. Pr., 343), it was ruled at general term that additional affidavits are admissible, to show facts occurring since the original application was made; and an affidavit was there allowed to be read, to show that a general assignment of all his property had been made by the defendant. .
III. The third and more difficult question relates to the defendant’s right to make the motion. In the affidavit on which the order to show cause was granted, it was sworn to by the defendant, that previous to the granting of such attachment this defendant had executed an assignment of all his projDerty in trust, for the benefit of his creditors, to J. P. Sullivan, that said' attachment has been levied upon property so assigned by this defendant to said Sullivan, and now in his possession, and the said assignee is embarrassed in the disposition of the said property by the claim of the sheriff under said attachment, and the defendant is desirous of a speedy hearing of a motion to discharge such attachment.
The case of Dickenson a. Benham (12 Abbotts’ Pr., 138 ; S. C., 20 How. Pr., 343), before referred to, is an express decision, at general term, that the fact of the defendant having made a gen*79eral assignment for the benefit of creditors after the attachment had issued, does not prevent his moving to discharge it. The case of Furman a. Walter (13 How. Pr., 348) is cited, as deciding that only a party who is some way injured by the process can move to discharge it, and it is held that an assignor for creditors has such a reversionary interest, if there should be a surplus, and such an interest on the appropriation as to justify his motion.
In Furman a. Walter, the transfer-was an absolute and un-■ conditional sale of a stock of goods.
In the present case, the assignment was made before the attachment, but no solid distinction exists on this ground. The residuary interest is as great in the one case as in the other.
It may be urged with force, that such an assignment operates to transfer the right of property, the possession, the exclusive dominion and control of property, and that only a remote conditional possibility of interest remains in the assignor; that if the property belonging to the assignee is illegally interfered with, his mode of redress is open and available, and that to allow one who could not take .possession, or exercise the least control, to interfere and remove an obstruction or apparent lien upon the property, seems anomalous. I do not feel at liberty, at special term, to disregard so express an authority from so high a source.
There remains one point to be noticed which was but slightly dwelt upon on the argument—viz., whether the affidavit of the defendant, on which the order to show cause was granted, is not sufficient to let in the further affidavits proffered by the plaintiff. But this affidavit was proffered solely as a ground for a short order to show cause, and that order specifies “ the warrant of attachment, the affidavit of Benjamin Kewhouse, and all the papers and proceedings in the action,” as the papers on which the motion will be made. I consider that the defendant could not have used this affidavit to obtain the order, had it been in his favor, under such a specification. The last clause of the affidavit is, “ said motion to be based upon the proceedings in said action, and upon the affidavit on which the same was granted.”' A copy of this affidavit was directed to be served with the order to show cause.
The defendant could not, against an objection, have used the affidavit in his favor. But the plaintiff could have used it as *80an admission, but not as an. affidavit relied on, or available for the defendant on the motion, and hence it is not a ground for admitting his own further affidavit.
I think the attachment must be discharged without costs.
Ordered accordingly.