
    Brayton Ives, Plaintiff, v. Gilbert T. Ellis et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    June, 1901.)
    Attachment — Plaintiff, when required to give further security under Code C. P., § 682 — Items recoverable — -Laches.
    Whether the court will direct an increase of the security theretofore given by the plaintiff to the defendants in order to procure a writ of attachment against their property, depends upon the question whether the action must be tried in order to get rid of the attachment.
    Where, therefore, an attachment against non-resident defendants was not assailable and had not been assailed on any statutory ground and the defendants had succeeded in the action up to the Court of Appeals, the court at Special Term increased the amount of the plaintiff’s original undertaking from $250 to $4,000 to cover the fees of counsel, sheriff and stenographer already incurred and fees to be incurred in defending the pending appeal to the Court of Appeals, the court considering that the trial and the eventual result of that appeal could alone decide the fate of the attachment — the parties -having agreed that the existence of the attachment was not affected by the judgments in favor of the defendants.
    Such a motion can be made at any time before the application of the attached property, or its proceeds, to the judgment recovered in the action.
    Motion to increase amount of undertaking on attachment.
    James H. Fay, for motion.
    Carter, Hughes & Dwight, opposed.
   Gildersleeve, J.

The action is for a breach of warranty with regard to certain books sold by defendants to the plaintiff. The defendants are, nonresidents, and plaintiff, - upon concededly proper and sufficient affidavits, obtained an attachment, and attached some books belonging to the defendants. The action was tried and resulted in a verdict for the defendants. An appeal was taken and the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment. The plaintiff then appealed to the Court of Appeals, where the case now rests. Ho motion has been made by defendants to vacate the attachment, as the attachment was regularly granted upon statutory grounds, but defendants now move to increase the amount of the security given by plaintiff upon the attachment from $250 to $6,000, under the provisions of section 682 of the Code. The parties agree that the attachment exists in full force and effect at the present time, notwithstanding the judgment in favor of the defendants. The defendants claim that they have paid out $4,000, as counsel- fees in the action, for sheriff’s fees, for stenographer’s fees upon the trial - and for traveling expenses, and they also claim that they will sustain further damage to a considerable extent in defending the appeal now pending in the Court of Appeals. There is no question of laches here, as this application can be made at any time before the actual application of the attached property, or of the proceeds thereof, to the payment of the judgment recovered in the action. Code, § 682. The amount of the damage thus far is claimed to be $2,600 counsel fees, $313 sheriff’s fees, $285 stenographer’s fees and $500 traveling expenses. Inasmuch as a motion to vacate the attachment would necessarily fail, it is evident that the trial and the eventual result of the appeal can alone decide the fate of the attachment. In the case of Tyng v. American Surety Co., 48 App. Div. 242, on the question of allowing counsel fees incurred in the action as damages by reason of an attachment, Mr. Justice Patterson uses the following language, viz.: “ The sole question before • us relates to the expenses of the trial of the action being recoverable, and that depends altogether upon the absolute necessity of trying the action to get rid of -the attachment.” The case at bar would seem to meet this condition, and it also appears that the following words of the learned justice apply here, viz.: It thereupon did become absolutely necessary for defendant to try the issues, in order to relieve the property from the attachment. It was that process which compelled defendant’s appearance in the. action. She was a nonresident, and, without the attachment, she would not have been brought within the jurisdiction of the court.” And the appellate court held, in the case above quoted, that counsel fees incurred in the action “ are damages which the defendant may sustain by reason of the attachment,” within the meaning of the undertaking given to procure the attachment. Referring to the case of Northampton Bank v. Wylie, 52 Hun, 148, urged by the plaintiff in the case at bar, in opposition to this motion, Hr. Justice Patterson says: “It is not to be controverted that sureties on an undertaking given on procuring an attachment are not ordinarily liable for general counsel fees incurred in the action,” but, under the state of facts above disclosed, he held that the authority of Northampton Nat. Bank v. Wylie did not apply. I must hold, under the above authority of Tyng v. American Surety Co., 48 App. Div. 240, that the $2,600 counsel fee must be considered as damages covered by the attachment bond. The same is true of the $285 stenographer’s fees, as they are “ expenses of the trial of the action,” within the meaning of the language of Hr. Justice Patterson, above quoted. The security, to be given in an action by a plaintiff who obtains a warrant of attachment, is intended to be an indemnity to the defendant against his costs, disbursements and damages. Fuerstenberg v. American Soda Fountain Co., 21 App. Div. 501. The sheriff’s fee of $313 is unquestionably covered by the bond. The claim of $500 for alleged traveling expenses, however, seems to be too hazy and indefinite to be here considered. I think substantial justice will be satisfied by raising the amount of the undertaking to $4,000. No costs.

Ordered accordingly.  