Collins v. Stanley

88 P. 620, 15 Wyo. 282, 1907 Wyo. LEXIS 6
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 P. 620 (Collins v. Stanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Stanley, 88 P. 620, 15 Wyo. 282, 1907 Wyo. LEXIS 6 (Wyo. 1907).

Opinion

Beard, Justice.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, the defendant in error, against the defendants, the plaintiffs in error, to recover damages which he alleged he had sustained by reason of the unlawful and forcible entry of the defendants upon a certain ranch belonging to plaintiff, and ejecting his agent therefrom, and by threats and intimidation holding possession of the same, and by tearing down the fences around the hay stacks, and by consuming and destroying the hay stacked on said ranch, and by depasturing said lands. That all of said acts of defendants were wilful and malicious, and were done with intent to injure and defraud plaintiff out of his right to the possession of said ranch, and out of his property. That defendants hold said premises with force and arms, and threaten to continue to deprive plaintiff of the possession of said property. That if they are allowed to continue so to do the plaintiff will be unable to protect his personal property on said ranch or to clean out the ditches, or to repair the fences thereon, and that he will be irreparably damaged.

The petition was presented to the judge of the District Court and a preliminary injunction issued restraining the defendants from interfering with plaintiff’s possession of [291]*291the ranch and restraining them from entering thereon. The plaintiff also filed with his petition his affidavit for a writ of attachment, which, after being entitled in the case, is as follows: “I, J. S. Stanley, being first duly sworn on my oath, depose and say that I am the plaintiff in the above entitled ,'action; that the defendant is justly indebted to plaintiff in the full and just sum of two thousand dollars; that the same is due on account of damages for wilfully and maliciously taking possession and holding possession of my Cow Creek ranch known as the Albert Walters ranch and using and destroying the hay thereon and depasturing said ranch; that plaintiff ought to recover of defendants the above sum of money after allowing all just credits, counterclaims or setoffs; and that the defendants fraudulently and criminally contracted the debt and incurred the above obligation. That the defendants are about to convert their property or a part thereof into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of their creditors.”

A writ of attachment was issued and levied upon personal property of defendants, and they filed a motion to discharge and dissolve the attachment and also a motion to vacate the injunction. Both motions were denied by the court upon hearing, and defendants bring error.

The grounds of the motion to discharge the attachment are “that the defendants did not fraudulently or criminally contract the alleged debt, nor fraudulently or criminally incur the alleged obligation.” And “that the defendants were not about to convert their property or a part thereof into money for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of the creditors.” This motion was supported by the affidavit of each of the defendants in substantially the same language as that contained in the motion, and was heard upon affidavits and oral testimony offered by the parties. When the grounds for an attachment are positively denied by the defendant in the affidavit in support of the motion to discharge, the burden then rests upon the plaintiff to sustain them by additional evidence; and in this case we do not [292]*292understand counsel for plaintiff to seriously contend that there is evidence to support the claim that defendants were about to dispose of their property with intent to defraud their creditors. This narrows the issues to the single question, was the obligation fraudulently or criminally incurred? The argument of counsel for plaintiff in error is that the evidence shows that the defendant, Mrs. Card, was entitled to the possession of the ranch and that she could not, therefore, commit any trespass thereon and no obligation was or could be fraudulently or criminally incurred. That she was entitled to possession under a lease or contract entered into between her husband and plaintiff, which lease or contract she claimed had been assigned or transferred to her by her husband and that he had since abandoned her; that she had a homestead right in the premises and that a release of the contract executed by her husband was void, etc.; while on the other hand it is argued that the contract or lease could not by its terms be assigned without the written consent of plaintiff; that it was a contract for personal services and could not be assigned; that plaintiff had no notice of the assignment, and that Card released and surrendered possession to plaintiff. But, if the contract could be assigned, then Card was the agent of his wife and she was bound by his acts in releasing and surrendering possession. These matters went to the merits of the case and involve questions of fact, upon which the parties had the right to a jury trial, as well as questions of law. These questions cannot be tried in this summary manner, but must be disposed of in the regular way on the trial. The traverse of the affidavit for the attachment by the motion to discharge in this case, is of the grounds for the attachment, and we think, that is the only traverse that is permitted on such motion. Were the rule otherwise, the validity of plaintiff’s cause of action might be put in issue, and require a trial on the merits; and thus in every case in which an attachment is issued the defendant could force a trial on the merits and on ex parte, affidavits, on a motion to dis[293]*293solve, which, as we have already stated, cannot be done. In Foley v. Virtue, 8 Abb. Prac. Rep. (N. S.), 407, it is said: “The referee and counsel appear to have acted in this matter upon the assumption that the case was to be tried upon its merits, whereas it would seem that the reference was ordered' only for the purpose of taking proofs in respect to the facts going to sustain or defeat the attachment. It may be that the referee is correct, and that no cause of action exists in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant, but that question cannot be tried in this summary mode, but must be disposed of in the regular way on the trial. Were the rule otherwise, the cause would in effect be tried on its merits on a mere motion to vacate the attachment.” In Newell v. Whitwell, 16 Mont., 243, it was held that it was not within the scope of the inquiry on a motion to dissolve an attachment to try the merits of the main action. In the opinion in that case a number of cases are cited and discussed. (See also Miller v. Chandler, 29 La. Ann., 88; Romeo v. Garofalo, 25 N. Y. App. Div., 191; Kirby v. Colwell, 81 Hun (N. Y.), 385; Chouteau v. Boughton, 100 Mo., 406.)

In the case at bar we think it must be assumed for the purposes of the motion that a cause of action exists in favor of plaintiff against defendants for damages in the sum claimed for trespass and for consuming and destroying his property; and that the only question presented by the motion on this ground is, whether the acts of defendants which caused the alleged damages were in their nature fraudulent or criminal. The circumstances of the transactions out of which plaintiff’s cause of action arose, .may be enquired into although they may involve some of the facts upon the merits; but such inquiry is for the purpose of determining whether grounds for the attachment exist and not whether there is or is not a cause of action. The evidence on the charge that defendants were about to dispose of their property or a p"art thereof with intent to defraud their creditors was probably insufficient to sustain that [294]

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Bluebook (online)
88 P. 620, 15 Wyo. 282, 1907 Wyo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-stanley-wyo-1907.