
    SUPREME COURT.
    Edward Reilly, appellant, agt. George H. Sisson, respondent.
    
      Attachment—When should he set aside because of the insufficiency of the affidavit upon which it was granted.
    
    An affidavit on which an attachment was granted, which alleged that the defendant was indebted to him in a certain sum, over and above all counter-claims, for damages for a breach of a contract, express or implied. That the facts upon which such indebtedness arises are that at sundry times since April 1, 1883, up to and including November 5, 1883, which is the day the attachment was granted, the plaintiff, at the special instance and request of the defendant, loaned and advanced to him sums of money, amounting in all to the sum of $6,000, which he promised and agreed to repay, but no part of which has been repaid: Held,, that the affidavit was insufficient; that no breach of the alleged contract was shown and the attachment should be vacated (Affirming 8. 0., ante, 224).
    
      First Department, General Term, January, 1884.
    
      Before Brady and Daniels, JJ.
    
    Appeal from an order vacating an attachment against the property of the defendant as a non-resident debtor.
    
      P. J. Joachimsen, for appellant.
    
      Stern & Myers, for respondent.
   Brady, J.

— The plaintiff in this case, in the affidavit on which the attachment was granted, alleges that the defendant was indebted to him in the just and full sum of $6,000, over and above all counter-claims for damages for a breach of a contract expressed or implied, other than a contract to marry, and that such indebtedness arises upon the facts stated ; and the facts are these: That at sundry times since April 1, 1883, up to and including this date, namely, the 5th day of ¡November, 1883, upon which day the attachment was granted, the plaintiff, at the special instance and request of the defendant, loaned and advanced to Mm sums of money amounting in all to the sum. of $6,000, which he promised and agreed to repay, but no part of which has been repaid.

It will appear, therefore, from the affidavit, that on the very day when some portion of the money was loaned to him, namely, the 5th day of November, 1883, when the affidavit was made, he had loaned and advanced money to him. As to what arrangement was made with regard to the repayment of the money, whether it was to be repaid instantly or at some time in the future agreed upon by the parties, whether any notification to repay the money so alleged to be advanced to the defendant was given him, and whether he had any information at all on the subject is not alleged.' Nor is it stated that any demand was made upon him on the date that the suit was commenced, for the money which is asserted to have been loaned and advanced. There is, in other words, nothing to show that as to the money at least that was advanced upon the day that the attachment was granted, there was any breach of the contract to pay. It is not reasonable to suppose that the money advanced upon the fifth of November was to be paid on the fifth of November, in the absence of any allegation to the contrary. The learned judge in the court below therefore regarded the affidavit as one which was subject to the criticism made upon the affidavit in the case of Smith agt. Davis (29 Hun, 306); and Pomeroy agt. Ricketts (27 Hun, 242), and this was a correct view of the subject.

In the case of Pomeroy agt. Ricketts (supra), the court said that it was indispensable to show that a cause of action existed before the right to an attachment could be made to appear, and that no hardship was imposed upon the plaintiff, who was allowed to prove this fact by his own affidavit, in requiring that it should be made out with a reasonable degree of clearness, and that the plaintiff must certainly be required to show that he has a demand upon which the defendant has become legally liable for the recovery of judgment against him, before a cause of action could be made to appear. And in the case of Smith agt. Davis (supra), the court said: “ To entitle the party to make such a seizure under an attachment before his right to appropriate the defendant’s property has been established by evidence, reasonable and satisfactory proof is required. A plain case must be made out, and where it is not, then it necessarily follows that the attachment must be set aside.” And the learned judge in the court below said that if the affidavit was true upon which the attachment was granted, a portion of the loan was made on the day the attach-: ment was issued. He might have added that not only was the loan made upon that day, but the money advanced, because, as we have seen, the language of the affidavit is that at sundry times from the 1st of April, 1883, up to and including the fifth of November, which was the date of the affidavit, the plaintiff loaned and advanced to the defendant cash. And the learned justice also said: “Therefore I do not think that a breach of the alleged contract was shown.”

The case of Kiefer agt. Webster (6 Hun, 526) seems to be, but is not, in conflict with, these views, because the allegation in that case was that the defendants were indebted to the plaintiffs in a sum named for goods sold and delivered, for which they had promised to pay but failed to do so. The time of the^ delivery is not stated, and it may be assumed that the promise was made after the delivery on demand. In reference to that case it must also be said the rule adopted was very liberal and should not be extended, particularly since the subsequent cases, to which reference has been made, have weakened its authority. It must be confined to cases, if it be held yet to be controlling, of a precisely similar character.

For these reasons it is thought that the judge in the court below was right in the disposition he made of the application to vacate the attachment; that the attachment should not be held, and that, on the contrary, it should have been vacated, as it was.

The order appealed from is therefore affirmed, with ten dollars costs and the disbursements of the appeal.  