
    Franklin J. Minck, Respondent, v. Melanie Levey, Appellant.
    (City Court of New York, General Term,
    June, 1896.)
    ■1. Attachment — Affidavit.
    . An affidavit stating that defendant had been the owner of two stores; that defendant said she had disposed of one because she was pressed for money, and had given the other to her son for work he had done for her and could not pay any of her creditors anything; that the son had always lived with her, and that within ten days of the sales she had bought large quantities of goods on credit when she was insolvent, sets forth a prima facie cause of attachment on the ground of disposing of property with intent to defraud.
    3. Same — Grounds of belief.
    A statement that the deponent’s grounds for belief as to statements made on information and belief were statements made by the defendant and the manager of plaintiff’s assignors, is sufficient.
    3. Same —Amount due.
    • Allegations of a sale to defendant of goods of a specified value which he promised to pay; a demand of payment; that no part had been paid and that plaintiff was entitled to.recover from defendant a specified sum over and above all counterclaims, are sufficient to show that the claims are due.
    Appeal from order denying motion to vacate attachment.
    Richard Marvin, for respondent.
    Benjamin Tuska, for appellant.
   Van Wyck, Ch. J.

The defendant moved to vacate the attachment because of the insufficiency of the complaint and affidavit upon which it was granted, and appeals from the order denying her' motion. Her; contention is: First, that there is no proof that defendant has disposed of -her property with intent to cheat and defraud creditors; second, that no proof is made that plaintiff’s claims are due; third, that five of the six causes of action are set ■ forth upon information and belief. The averments as to disposition of property with intent to cheat and defraud are, that defendant, four days before the attachment issued, was the owner of two butcher stores, one on Ninth avenue and the other on Eighth avenue, this city; that she had disposed of both; that she said she had disposed of the Eighth avenue store because she needed some naoney, and had sold the Ninth avenue store to' her son David; that she was pushed for money, and could go on no further,, and had to do something to protect herself, and had so made a hill of sale to her son;, that .plaintiff asked her for the money due him, and that she said she could not pay him or any other, of her creditors anything; that he asked her what had become of the money she received from her son for the store she sold him; that she said she got nothing for it, that she had given him the store for working for her; that he always had lived and still lives with her; that plaintiff asked her how it. was she could buy goods the day before Christmas on credit, if she intended to act honestly, and then sellout the next day to her son; that she .replied that she had done it, and that that was all there was about it; that she said she had no book accounts or claims, as the goods sold by her had not been sold on credit; that plaintiff said to. her that she owed a large sum for goods bought by her on credit, and that as no one of her creditors had got anything, whát had become.of the money for these goods¿. that she replied that she could not tell, and • that all she knew was that she had. nothing to .pay anyone with; that she had, within ten days' of selling out of both stores, bought -large quantities of merchandise on credit, when she was insolvent, and .that she said she knew she was insolvent and never could pay for the same. These averments, uncontfadicted and • unexplained by her, are sufficient to make out a prima facie cause of attachment ' for disposing of property with intent to defraud.

The plaintiff’s affidavit and complaint.sets forth six causes of action for goods sold and delivered to defendant, one on knowledge, and five upon information arid belief;. the latter having been assigned, to plaintiff by the five original veridors. The complaint is referred to in the affidavit and made a part of the application for. the attachment. The plaintiff avers that the sources, of his information arid the grounds of his belief, as to the statements as to these causes of action stated upon information and belief, are the. statements , made to him “ by the defendant and by Thomas A. Adams, gemeral manager and agent of the companies (plaintiff’s five assignors) hereinbefore mentioned.” This is equivalent to an averment that every fact set forth upon information and belief was communicated to him by both the defendant and the agent,. Adams, and is a sufficient statement of the sources of his information and the grounds:of his belief.

The allegations of the five assigned causes is that each assignor had on a day certain sold and delivered to defendant goods of a specified value which defendant promised to pay, and had been demanded, and no part had been paid. There is no allegation that the purchase price was to be paid on a day fixed, but the law makes such price payable upon the delivery of the goods where no time of payment is fixed by the contract, and, moreover, there is an averment that the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant $911.85, with interest from December 23, 1895, upon the six causes, over and above all counterclaims' known to plaintiff.

Order affirmed, with costs.

Conlan and O’Dwyer, JJ., concur.

Order affirmed, with costs.  