
    Macumber vs. Beam.
    In an application for a dissolution of an attachment, under the act of 1851, the application it* sufficient so fur os allowing title to the property in the applicant, if from its terms it would reasonably be inferred that the property still continued to belong to the applicant. In an application to dissolve an attachment, under the act of 1851, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show the existence of facts justifying the iesuingof the writ.
    
      Certiorari to Commissioner of Kalamazoo Circuit.
   Opinion by

Christiancy, J.

This was an application made by Beam, the defendant in error, under the act of 1851, to a Circuit Court Commissioner of Kalamazoo County, for the dissolution of an attachment issued from the Circuit Court of that county against Beam at the suit of Macumber. The first objection was that the application presented to the Commissioner does not show by sufficient and certain allegations the right of the petitioner to the property attached. The allegation is certainly necessary that the property of the applicant has beSn attached, but it has not been held that the application must contain an express averment that the property still belongs to the applicant. The farthest the Court has gone has been to hold that whenever it affirmatively appears that the property at the time of the application did not belong to the 'applicant, he was not entitled to have the attachment dissolved in this proceeding.

The case of Osborne vs. Robbin, 10 Mich, 277, contains a dictum from which the other allegation might be deemed necessary, but the facts did not call for any such decision. And the Court thought the application sufficient, if from its terms it would reason-.a’bly be inferred that the property still continued to belong to the applieant. In this case the attachment is clearly.stated. The prayer is that the attachment may be dissolved and the property restored to the applicant. This implies a continued ownership.

The other question raised by the case was whether, upon the hearing before the Commissioner, the plaintiff in the attachment is to begin by showing good cause for its issuing, or whether the defendant is to begin by showing the non-existence of such cause, and upon whom rests the burden of proof. Held, That the plaintiff is to begin, and that the burden of proof is upon him to show'the existence of such facts as justified the issuing of the writ,

There was no error in the proceedings, and the judgment was affirmed with costs.  