Adams v. Speelman

46 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 35
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 46 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 35 (Adams v. Speelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Speelman, 46 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 35 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.:

Action to recover damages for the wrongful taking and detention of certain chattels alleged to be the property of the plaintiff. Defense, that the defendant, as sheriff, levied upon and attached the said chattels by virtue of two warrants of attachment issued out of this court in actions against Perry Adams, who, and not tbe plaintiff, was the owner of said chattels.

At the trial the defendant offered in evidence the attachments by virtue of which he claimed to have levied on the property, but they were excluded by the court and the defendant excepted. That exception raises the principal question in the case.

The question involves the construction of the second subdivision of section 649 of the' Code of Civil Procedure, and for the purpose of interpreting that subdivision it will be useful to consider the r entire section, which is as follows:

“ Sec. 649. A levy under a warrant of attachment must be made as follows:
“ 1. Upon real property, by filing with the clerk of .the county, where it is situated, a notice of the attachment, stating the names of the parties to the action, the amount of the plaintiff’s claim as stated in the warrant, and a description of the particular property levied upon. The notice must be subscribed by the plaintiff’s attorney, adding his office address, and must be recorded and indexed by the clerk in the same book, in like manner and with the like, effect, as the notice of the pendency of an action.
2. Upon personal property, capable of manual delivery, including a bond, promissory note or other instrument for the payment of money, by taking the same into the sheriff’s actual custody. lie must thereupon, without delay, deliver to the person from whose possession the property is taken, if any, a copy of the warrant and of-the affidavit upon which it was granted.
“■■8. Hpon other personal property, by leaving a certified copy of the warrant, and a notice showing the property attached, with the [37]*37person holding the same; or, if it consists of a demand, other than as specified in the last subdivision, with the person against whom it exists; or, if it consists of a right or share in the stock of an association or corporation, or interest or profits thereon, with the president or other head of the association or corporation, or the secretary, cashier or managing agent thereof.”

In the present case, although there was testimony tending to show that the property, when taken by the sheriff, was in the constructive possession of Perry Adams, the father of the plaintiff, and that the sheriff delivered to him a copy of the warrants and of the affidavits upon which they were granted, yet there was evidence which warranted the conclusion that the actual possession of the property, at the time of the levy, was in the plaintiff. The plaintiff was not served with a copy of the papers. It is to be assumed that the trial judge found the facts to be as last above stated, and that upon that ground he excluded proof of the attachments. If a delivery of a copy of the warrants and affidavits to the person from whose actual possession the property was taken by the sheriff, constituted an essential element of the levy, without which there was no levy, the ruling was correct. If, however, the lack of such delivery was a mere irregularity, not affecting the validity of the levy, the ruling was erroneous.

The second subdivision expressly declares that a levy shall be made upon personal property, capable of manual delivery, by taking the same into the sheriff’s actual custody. The subsequent clause, requiring the delivery of a copy of the papers, we regard as directory merely: Had the language been to the effect that the levy shall be made by taking the property into the actual custody of the sheriff and by his delivering a copy, etc., the case would have been different. But that is not its effect. The clause requiring the delivery of a copy of the papers is not a part of the original section. It was adopted in 1879, two years after the section took effect. It was not intended to add to what was previously required to constitute a levy, but it imposed upon the sheriff a duty to be performed, without delay, after the levy was made. The original section, in defining what should constitute a levy on personal property capable of manual delivery, was declaratory of the common law. If the taking of the property by the sheriff, Into his actual [38]*38custody, under process directing liim to take property, is not a valid and perfect levy, strange consequences might follow. The sheriff is required to Iceep the property attached by him. (Code Civil Pro., § 674.) May he redeliver the property to the person from whom he has lawfully taken it, on the theory that by his omission to deliver a copy of the papers he has no right to detain it ? He may maintain ah action to reduce to his actual possession an article of personal property, capable of manual delivery, but of which he has been unable to obtain possession (Code Civil Pro., § 655); or the plaintiff, by leave of the court, may bring such action in t'he name of the sheriff and himself jointly (sec. 677), or he may be joined with the sheriff in such an action brought by the latter. (Sec. 679.) Would it be a defense to such an action that the sheriff had not delivered a copy of the papers? If personal property attached, belonging to the defendant, has passed out of the hands of the sheriff, without having been sold or converted into money, and the attachment has not been discharged as to that property, he must, if practicable, regain possession thereof; and for that purpose he has all the authority which he had to seize the same under the warrant. (Sec. 708, subd. 3.) And a person who willfully conceals or withholds such property from him is liable to double damages, at the suit of the party aggrieved. (Id.) If, as the plaintiff’s counsel contends, a taking of the property by the sheriff into his actual possession is a void act, without a delivery of a copy of the papers, it seems to follow that the lack of such delivery would constitute a defense to an action brought under the provisions last referred to.

Each of the other subdivisions of section 649, by like language, defines what shall constitute a levy in respect to the class of property to which it relates. Under the first subdivision, a levy must be made on real property by filing with the clerk a notice containing certain particulars specified in the first sentence. It may be that each of those directions must be substantially complied with in order to constitute a valid levy (though we express no opinion on that point), but it seems clear that the requirements contained in the next sentence, as to the subscribing of the notice and the recording and indexing it, are directory merely, and their omission, while irregular, would not vitiate the levy.

[39]*39The Code of Procedure (§ 184) required that, upon arresting a defendant, by virtue of an order of arrest, the sheriff should deliver to him a copy of the order and affidavit. It was frequently held that the requirement was directory, and its omission was an irregularity merely, which did not render the proceeding null. (Keeler v. Belts, 3 Code Rep., 183; Courter v. McNamara, 9 How. Pr., 255; Barker v. Cook, 40 Barb., 254; Mather v. Hannaur, 55 How. Pr., 1.)

The cases cited by the respondent’s counsel are not in point. In Pardee v.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-speelman-nysupct-1886.