Crandall v. Bryan

5 Abb. Pr. 162, 15 How. Pr. 48
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 Abb. Pr. 162 (Crandall v. Bryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crandall v. Bryan, 5 Abb. Pr. 162, 15 How. Pr. 48 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

E. Darwin Smith, J.

If I am entitled to believe the complaint in this action, and the affidavits annexed thereto, on which the order of arrest was made, the defendant has obtained the title to the plaintiff’s farmland deprived him thereof without any consideration, by fraud and false pretences. Fraudulent representations, or deceit accompanied by damage, constitute a good ground of action in respect to a sale of lands, as much as in respect to personal property. Before the Code, an action on the case for the fraud or deceit would clearly have been sustainable upon the facts set up in the complaint and affidavits in this case (Whitney a. Allair, 1 Comst., 308; 13 Johns., 325; Ib., 402; 7 Wend., 386; 17 Ib., 193).

Two points are made upon the papers on this motion, assuming that a good cause of action is stated in the complaint:

1. That the order of arrest should be discharged, because the complaint and affidavits do not make out by competent proof or legal evidence the fact of the fraud.

2. That the Code does not authorize an arrest in such a case if the fraud be sufficiently established.

Section 181 of the Code provides that the order may be made when it shall appear to the judge, by affidavits of the plaintiff of any other person, that a sufficient cause of action exists, and that the case is one of those mentioned in section 179.

The affidavits to be presented to the judge must make out a prima facie case for the arrest. It is said in some cases, that they must be positive as respects the cause of action and the ground on which the arrest is sought (1 C. R., 41; 3 How. Pr. R., 265; Ib., 219). But this rule is to be construed and applied in a rational manner, and with some degree of qualification in respect to the particular facts and circumstances of each case. The judge is to be satisfied from the affidavits that a cause of action exists, and that the case is a proper one for an arrest [165]*165within the Code. The statute does not define the proof to be made, except that.it be by affidavit, nor does it define or fix the degree of, or extent of, the evidence; how near it must come to legal evidence—such as would be required on the trial of the issues; or how much short, if any, it may come of such evidence. Something, doubtless, is left to the judgment and discretion of the judge, in respect to the particular facts of such case, and such was the obvious intention of the Legislature. But the judge is not at liberty to exercise any thing but a sound judicial judgment upon the force and weight of the evidence produced. He must, as Judge Savage said, in Smith v. Luce (14 Wend., 239), be satisfied judicially

An affidavit upon information and belief generally, is clearly insufficient; but I agree with Judge Edmonds, in Whitbeck v. Roth (5 How. Pr. R., 143), that some of the material facts may be stated upon information and belief, where the affidavit states the nature and quality and means of the information, so that the judge can be able to see that this belief is well founded, otherwise there obviously could be no arrest in many fit cases, owing to the difficulty of procuring, within the requisite time for the application, as full proof as would be necessary for a final recovery.

In this case, the witness Hall, who proves the essential facts of the fraud, went to Michigan to take possession of the land for the plaintiff, and swears positively that he found one Sacket in possession of the land, occupying it as owner, and claiming to be the owner thereof, and asserting that he had the legal title to it. So far as relates to the occupation and claim of title, this is positive. He also swears positively that he ascertained then and there, by examination of the records of the office of the Registrar of the county of Barry, and from the examination of the official certificates of said Registrar, and from the owner and occupant of said land, naming him, and other sources which he believed, that the defendant did not own, and never had owned, the land in question, but the same belonged to said Sacket at the date of the defendant’s deed to the plaintiff, and had for four years.

The witness swears in substance and to the effect that he found such to be the facts on examination at the Registrar’s office, and from the official certificates of the Registrar. This is not as certain as the affidavit of the Registrar and the affidavit [166]*166of the occupant Sachet would make it. On the trial this witness cannot, from this examination and information, prove the facts to be established in respect to the defendant’s want of title.

But on this motion, and for the purpose of the arrest of the defendant, I think it is sufficient. It is something more than mere information—it is personal examination of the records— personal examination of the official certificates of the registry, and information from the person in actual possession of the land. The judge can see from this statement that the witness applied at the proper quarter or source to learn the facts, and that, if he speaks the truth, he was entitled to believe what he states—that the defendant had no title to the land in question. The plaintiff makes as positive proof of the facts to authorize the arrest as he could make in this State, or could make without obtaining the affidavits of the Eegistrar and of Sacket from Michigan. I do not think he was bound to do so for the purpose of this arrest.

The plaintiff also states in his complaint, that from information derived from the records of the office of the Eegistrar of Barry county, and from the official certificates of said Eegistrar, and from other sources, and upon his belief, no part of said land in Michigan belonged to the defendant at the date of his deed thereof. This allegation in the complaint implies that the plaintiff himself also has examined the records, or, certainly, the official certificates of the Eegistrar in respect to the title of the defendant. The source of his information, too, is thus stated. Taken with the more positive affidavit of Hall, I think the plaintiff makes out a prima facie case of fraud for the purpose of the arrest of the defendant.

The remaining question is, whether the Code authorizes an arrest upon the case thus made ?

Section 119 of the Code makes five classes of cases of arrest. The order of arrest in this case, if sustainable, must come under subdivision 4 of the section or class, which is as follows: “ When the defendant has been guilty of a fraud in contracting the debt or incurring the obligation for which the action is brought, or in concealing or disposing of the property for the taking or detention of which the action is brought.” The present action is not one of debt or of contract, strictly speaking, and the right of arrest cannot be sustained upon the first clause of this subdivision or class of the section. The action is one for fraud or deceit. [167]*167It is strictly such an action as would have been called, before the Code, an action on the case.” It is much to be regretted that while the Codifiers did not, as they could not, abolish the common law or common law rights, they should have abolished the names of remedies which were so well defined and well understood as to have become almost inseparable from the right of action, and attempted to introduce an entire new nomenclature into the law.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Abb. Pr. 162, 15 How. Pr. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandall-v-bryan-nysupct-1857.