The action was brought to recover a sum of money only, and a warrant of attachment against the property of the defendant was granted upon the sole ground that he had departed from the State of Hew York with intent to defraud his creditors. The motion to-.vacate the attachment was made by the defendant upon affidavits, under the authority of section 683 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it Was opposed by new proof on the part of the plaintiff, by which it was made to appear that a cause of action existed against the defendant. .While, strictly speaking, the proof uponthat subject was not admissible under the provisions of the Code, which permit new proof to be offered by the plaintiff to sustain any ground for the attachment recited in the warrant, and no other, yet the affidavits were-received without objection, so far as appears from the papers, and it was, therefore, proper for the court to consider the facts stated
The question presented .by the affidavits upon which this motion was heard, is whether, Upon the whole case, it could be said that the defendant departed from the State with intent to defraud his creditors. The decision of that' question required the court to pass upon the question whether or not the proof showed that, the defendant, when he left this State, was insane, so that lie was not able to form any intent, and, therefore, that the ground stated for granting the writ did not in fact exist. This did not involve, in any aspect of the case, the merits of the action, which was brought simply to recover a debt Where a motion is made to vacate an attachment lipón contesting affidavits, and the only question presented is whether, upon all the' facts, the plaintiff has a cause of action, and that question is one of fact and not of law,' it has been-held that the question should not be decided -upon affidavits but be left for determination at the trial. (Kirby v. Colwell, 81 Hun, 385.) Upon the state of facts presented in that case the court said that the- attachment should not be vacated, but be left' to stand or fall as the result of the determination at the trial of the main question presented by'the issues, which is also the question presented by the motion to vacate. But that is - not this case. The decision of this motion -can have no effect upon the merits of the action, because it does not involve any question which is presented by the issues raised upon the pleadings. The only thing to be decided,- therefore, is whether the facts shown Upon the motion warrant the granting of the attachment. The Gode gives to the defendant the right to move to vacate the warrant upon new affidavits, upon which both parties are at liberty to present all the facts to enable the court to decide whether the grounds upon, which the warrant is issued in fact exist. The right to move upon such papers involves a corresponding duty on the part of the court to decide the question upon a fair preponderance of the evidence as given by the affidavits. This is the rule where a motion.
The facts and circumstances connected with the departure from the State were clearly shown in this case. It was made to appear by an overwhelming preponderance of evidence that when the defendant left the State he was in a condition of insanity, almost amounting to mania, and upon the proof it was left very doubtful whether he was competent to devise any scheme or to have any intent whatever.
Where the intent with which an act is done is one, the existence of which the law infers from the doing of the act, the fact that the person who does it is a lunatic will not relieve him from the civil liability for the damages which the act causes. But, where it is necessary to prove on the part of the lunatic an actual intent, the existence of which is.not inferred from the act itself, the fact of lunacy may be sufficient to disprove the existence of the intent. Such is the case where it is sought to charge the lunatic with exemplary damages (McIntyre v. Sholty, 121 Ill. 660), or to establish an intent with the view to punish him for a crime. The same considerations apply here. It is not necessary to say that the mere fact of insanity operates as a matter of law to disprove the intent. It is sufficient if there is made to appear a state of insanity so great that the court would have a right to infer that the insane man did not form the intent charged against him, and if that did appear it would justify the court in concluding as a matter of fact that the
Van' Brunt, P. J., Barrett, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., .concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements. '