This is an appeal by plaintiff from an order of the district court vacating a writ of attachment on defendant’s motion. Tihe action was brought to recover on a promissory note executed by the defendents as partners. The plaintiff procured the issuance of the writ of attachment upon an- affidavit, alleging as grouuds therefor “that the defendants, Ferdinand Hoefs and Theodore Heling, above named, -have sold, assigned, transferred, secreted, and mortgaged their property, and are about to sell, -assign, transfer, and secrete their property, with intent to ¡cheat and defraud their creditors, and to hinder and delay them in the collection -of their debts.” The defendants answered the complaint, and at the same time served upon the plaintiff’s attorneys a notice of motion to dissolve the attachment. The notice was entitled in the action, and read as- follows: “You will please take notice: That the defendants in the above entitled action, by their attorney, will on the first day of April, 1904, at two o’clock p. m. of said day, -before the court at the chambers thereof, in the city of Wahpeton, in- Richland county, North Dakota, move the -court to dissolve and vacate the warrant of attachment issued in the above entitled action; that the said motion will be made upon the affidavit -of Ferdinand Hoefs, the answer of the defendants in this action, all of which are hereto attached, and upon all the files and records of the case.” The affidavit of Hoefs referred to in- the notice and served with it, after setting forth in some detail facts tending to show -that the -defendants were solvent, and in good financial condition, specifically denied -the -allegations of the affidavit upon which the attachment was issued.
The first point made by appellant is that the -court erred in entertaining the motion to dismiss, because the .motion papers -did not comply with rule 5 of the district court which provides: “When the n-oti-ce is for irregularity it shall set forth particularly the irregularity -complained- of. In -other cases it shall not be necessary to make a specification of points, but it shall b-e sufficient if the notice state generally the grounds of the motion.” It is claimed that the notice points out no irregularity, nor does it state generally the grounds of the motion. The fact that no irregularity was mentioned in the notice, and the fact that it was based upon an affidavit which *235specifically denied the truth of the attachment affidavit, could not fail to inform the plaintiff that the 'defendant claimed no irregularity of procedure, but would demand the vacation of the writ on the ground that the alleged grounds for the attachment did not exist. The record discloses that the plaintiff was not misled, and, even if it could be properly said that the rule of court was not complied with, we think it would have been a very proper exercise of its discretion of the trial court to overlook so trivial a departure from the rule. The defendants’ affidavit put in issue the facts alleged in the attachment affidavit as grounds for the issuance -of the writ. Tire burden was upon plaintiff to prove that the attachment affidavit was true.
(103 N. W. 751.)
We have examined the record with care and can find no evidence whatever that either of the defendants had in any manner disposed of any property with intent to hinder, .delay, or defraud any creditor, or that they were about to do1 so. Numerous affidavits were read in evidence by the plaintiff, and one of the defendants was at the request of the plaintiff examined and cross-examined at the hearing. The most that the evidence which the plaintiff submitted or offered to submit tended to show was that the defendants were in financial straits; that they had mortgaged or pledged much of their property to secure bona fide debts; that they had been selling property every dajq and had offered to sell out their business; that their alleged defense to the note in suit was sham. There is an utter absence of evidence or offer of proof tending to show any disposition of property out of the ordinary course of business, or with fraudulent intent. That was the sole issue before the court, and, unless the plaintiff could prove that the defendants 'had or were about to make a fraudulent disposition of their property, the court had no other alternative than to vacate the attachment, even though the defense to the action was palpably without merit. There being no evidence or offer of evidence sufficient to support the attachment affidavit, it is unnecessary to discuss the several assignments of error in detail.
The order is affirmed
All concur.