Beardslee v. . Ingraham

76 N.E. 476, 183 N.Y. 411, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 798
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 76 N.E. 476 (Beardslee v. . Ingraham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beardslee v. . Ingraham, 76 N.E. 476, 183 N.Y. 411, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 798 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

*417 Willard Bartlett, J.

An injunction against a United States marshal, forbidding him from selling under an execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the United States, is in effect an injunction against the Federal tribunal itself. (Central National Bank v. Stevens, 169 U. S. 432, 463, and cases there cited.) In that case a part of the decree of the state court under review sought to restrain the complainants in a suit in the United States Circuit, Court from proceeding under the final decree of sale in the United States Circuit Court and from enforcing the other remedies adjudged to them by that decree. The granting of this injunction was condemned as erroneous by the Supreme Court of the United States. “ The injunction,” said Mr. Justice Shiras, who wrote the opinion of the court, was a plain interference with the proceedings in another court which had full and complete jurisdiction over the parties to the subject-matter of the suit, and which jurisdiction had attached long before the suit in the Supreme Court (of the State) had begun.” State courts are expressly declared to be destitute of all power to restrain either the process or proceedings in the national courts. The general rule that there is no authority in the state courts to enjoin proceedings in the courts of the United States is laid down as distinctly as a judicial proposition can be declared and the correctness of the conclusion finds ample support in the authorities cited. (See Peck v. Jenness, 7 How. [U. S.] 612, 624; Riggs v. Johnson County, 6 Wall. 166; 2 Story’s Equity Jur. § 900; Moran v. Sturges, 154 U. S. 256.) In the case last cited (which was a reversal of Matter of Schuyler Steam Tow-Boat Co., 136 N. Y. 169), the question was whether it was within the power of a state court to restrain the libellants in a District Court of the United States from prosecuting their libels, and the chief justice declared the general rule to be “ that State courts cannot enjoin proceedings in the courts of the United States,” and reviewed a large number of authorities sustaining that doctrine.

Furthermore, it is “ a rule of general application that where *418 property is in the actual possession of one court of competent jurisdiction, such possession cannot be disturbed by process out of another court.” (Moran v. Sturges, supra, on p. 274.) This proposition is stated by Chief Justice Fuller to have been repeatedly affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and was perhaps most clearly and explicitly enunciated by Mr. Justice Matthews in Covell v. Heyman (111 U. S. 176) in explaining the questions decided in Freeman v. Howe (24 How. [U. S.] 450). His language is as follows : “ The point of the decision in Freeman v. Howe (supra) is that when property is taken and held under process, mesne or final, of a court of the United States, it is in the custody of the law, and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the court from which the process has issued, for the purposes of the writ; that the possession of the officer cannot be disturbed by process from any state court, because to disturb that possession would be to invade .the jurisdiction of the court by whose command it is held, and to violate the law which that jurisdiction is appointed to administer; that any person, not a party to the suit or judgment, whose property has been wrongfully, but under color of process, taken and withheld, may prosecute, by ancillary proceedings, in the court whence the process issued, his remedy for restitution of the property or its proceeds while remaining in the control of that court; but that all other remedies to which he may be entitled against officers or parties, not involving the withdrawal of the property or its proceeds from the custody of the officer and the jurisdiction of the court, he may pursue in any tribunal, state or Federal, having jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter. And vice versa, the samé principle protects the possession of property while thus held, by process issuing from state courts, against any disturbance under process of the courts of the United States; excepting, of course, those cases wherein the latter exercise jurisdiction for the purpose of enforcing the supremacy of the Constitution Bind laws of the United States.”

The attachment which Mr. Ingraham sued out in the Circuit *419 Court of the United States antedated any proceedings in the suit in the Supreme Court of this state which resulted in the appointment of the receivers. Assuming that there was a sufficient and legal levy of this attachment by filing it in the office of the clerk of the United States Circuit Court for the western district of New York, such levy was effective to give to the Federal tribunal exclusive jurisdiction of "the property, which could not be disturbed by the state courts, if a levy of an attachment upon real estate brings the property to which it relates constructively into the custody of the tribunal out of which the warrant is issued. The proposition of law which appears to have led the courts below to sustain the injunction under review, is that the levy of an attachment upon real estate gives to the court from which the process issues neither actual nor constructive possession of the property; and hence that the court has not acquired such custody of the property, by virtue of the attachment, as to prevent its lawful seizure by the receivers of another court. This doctrine finds support in a decision rendered in 1896 by a district judge of the United States sitting alone in the Circuit Court for the southern district of California. (In re Hall & Stillson Co., 73 Fed. Repr. 527.) It was adopted in order to uphold the title of receivers appointed by a Federal tribunal as against the claim under a levy of attachment issued out of a state court. The learned judge conceded that so far as personal property was concerned, taken by the sheriff under the levy of the attachment, his title was superior to that of the receiver; but he held that the same rule did not apply to real estate, inasmuch as the attachment gave only a lien upon the lands, without any apparent right to possession.

I can see no logical reason for making an attachment under such circumstances effective to oust the jurisdiction of another court in the case of personal property, but ineffective to oust such jurisdiction in the case of real property. The purpose of the law is the same in both cases — to secure an appropriation of the attached property to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim in the event that he recovers judgment. I cannot *420 find in the law of attachment anywhere any indication of an intent to make this remedy available to a plaintiff in case of personal property, so as-to prevent its seizure by subsequent proceedings in another court, and to refuse the remedy in the case of real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 476, 183 N.Y. 411, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beardslee-v-ingraham-ny-1906.