Bernheim v. Daggett

12 Abb. N. Cas. 316
CourtNew York City Court
DecidedApril 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Abb. N. Cas. 316 (Bernheim v. Daggett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernheim v. Daggett, 12 Abb. N. Cas. 316 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

McCue, J.

On March 1,1876, the plaintiff recovered judgment against one Nicholas Ehlers for $3,710.60, in the supreme court, city and county of New York, and on the same day he caused a transcript to be filed in Kings county, and issued execution upon said judgment to the defendant, then sheriff of said county, pursuant to which the sheriff made a levy. The defendant had at this time other executions in his hands against the same defendant, upon judgments recovered as follows : City Court of Brooklyn, Henry Behrman v. Nicholas Ehlers, judgment for $873.26, recovered January 31, 1876; execution issued the same' day, and levy made February 1, 1876 ; Supreme Court of Kings county, Raphael Braun v. Nicholas Ehlers, for $3,077.89, recovered February 29, 1876, and execution issued same day.

The property of the defendant in the executions consisted of a large number of milch cows, wagons, some horses, harness, etc., being the general outfit of a milk dairy. The sheriff advertised the sale of the [318]*318property for March 13, 1876. No sale took place on that day and the sale was adjourned to March 20, then to April 7, and again to April 13, on which day a sale was attempted. Some of the property was put up and knocked down to one or more bidders, but the sale was not perfected, and was adjourned because of the service of certain orders staying the sale made in the aforesaid actions. It appears from the evidence that' the orders staying the sale were made and served' before the sale had actually commenced, but the place of sale being quite distant from the sheriff’s office, some time intervened before notice of the stay was given to the deputy in charge of the sale. As soon as the deputy received notice of the stay, he declared that “ the sale was for nothing,” as the order of the court stayed it. It would appear from the testimony that the parcels which had been struck off would, if the sale had been carried out, have realized enough or nearly enough to satisfy all the executions. ,

The sale was adjourned to April 20 and 27. No sale was made, and nothing was done pending the disposition of the orders to show cause, &c., until June 7, when a sale was made, the property realizing a sum sufficient to satisfy the prior executions, and leaving the plaintiff’s execution entirely unsatisfied.

It seems that between April 13 and June 7 large expenses had been incurred in keeping the property, and it was suggested that some of the "property had disappeared, but there was nothing in the case charging the defendant with any specific act contributing to the loss of the property, if there was any.

This action seeks to recover damages for failure to return the plaintiff’s execution within sixty days. The answer admits the formal portions of the complaint denying only the allegation of failure of duty in not returning the execution within the time required by law. After the plaintiff rested, the defendant' was [319]*319granted leave to amend his answer by setting np: First, that the defendant in the execution had no property out of which the execution could have been satisfied. Second, that the omission to return the execution within sixty days was by direction, of plaintiff’s attorneys.

The plaintiff objected to the amendment and excepted to the decision of the court, and this point forms one of the main points on this appeal.

In addition to this objection to the amendment allowed, the plaintiff claims that the sale made on April 13, was valid, so far as it had proceeded, and that the sheriff is liable to account for the proceeds which he might have realized, and that the defense that there was not property sufficient to satisfy the execution is not sustained..

It is also claimed that the evidence did not sustain the defense, that the failure to return the execution was because, of directions given by the plaintiff’s attorney ; and lastly, that the non-return of the execution entitled the plaintiff to nominal damages in any event, whereas the verdict was for the defendant.

As to the question of the amendment, which the defendant was permitted to make on the trial, we are of opinion that this was a matter within the discretion of the court, and we cannot see that it was exercised to the plaintiff’s injury. The plaintiff was present at the sale of April 13, and communicated the facts which there occurred to his counsel, and he was again present at the sale of June 7, and so also was his attorney. The plaintiff was able to produce on the trial a number of witnesses as to what took place on both days, and was not therefore at any disadvantage in respect to the question as to what property the defendant had and its value. The correspondence which had taken place between the plaintiff’s attorney and the deputy-sheriff in charge of the execution, and the various orders [320]*320under which the sale had been stayed, were all well known to the parties and were produced on the trial, so that the plaintiff was not taken by surprise on the question as to whether the delay in returning the execution was or was not because of instructions to the sheriff by the plaintiff’s attorney. All the testimony which bore upon these two questions seems to have been at hand, and appears in the printed case, so that it could not be urged that the plaintiff was surprised by that line of defense. Indeed, the objection to the amendment was not placed upon the ground of surprise, but only on the ground that the defenses were new, and that it was not in the power of the court to permit them to be made on the trial. That it was clearly within the power of the court to allow the amendment, see Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co. v. Nelson,

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16 N.Y.S. 101 (New York City Court, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Abb. N. Cas. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernheim-v-daggett-nycityct-1880.