Bono Sawdust Supply Co. v. Hahn & Golin

3 A.D.2d 221, 159 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6425

This text of 3 A.D.2d 221 (Bono Sawdust Supply Co. v. Hahn & Golin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bono Sawdust Supply Co. v. Hahn & Golin, 3 A.D.2d 221, 159 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6425 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Wenzel, J.

Plaintiff, in its complaint against a law firm and a corporation, seeks to recover a money judgment for damages allegedly sustained as the result of the service upon a bank of a third-party subpcena in proceedings supplementary to judgment, an effect of which service was to restrain the bank from paying out money from plaintiff’s account in said bank (see Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 779, 781). The basis for the issuance of the subpcena was a judgment for a sum of money which had been entered in a previous action in the City Court of the City [223]*223of New York in favor of the defendant corporation against plaintiff, in which action the defendant law firm had represented the defendant corporation, and the bases of the contention that a tortious wrong was committed by defendants are that the judgment contained a provision staying issuance of execution for a stated time and that the subpoena was served before the expiration of that time; and that, despite plaintiff’s subsequent furnishing of an undertaking in connection with an appeal from the judgment, defendants refused to release the funds in plaintiff’s bank account and sought to delay ultimate release of the funds by applying for an adjournment of plaintiff’s ensuing motion to vacate the subpoena.

The complaint alleges that the judgment against plaintiff was entered on May 24, 1956 and that it contained a provision staying issuance of execution immediately and for five days after service of a copy of the judgment upon the judgment debtor’s attorney. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 615, authorizes the granting of such stay without requiring the furnishing of security.) The complaint further alleges that the judgment was not served until it was mailed to plaintiff’s attorneys in the evening of May 25, 1956 (a Friday) and that defendants served the third-party subpoena before service of the judgment and that they did so “ wilfully, wantonly, maliciously and wrongfully ”; that at the time of the entry of the judgment defendants knew that the plaintiff and each of the three partners in the plaintiff firm respectively owned property of stated general description and that they ‘ ‘ were financially sound and well able to pay the said judgment many times, if required”; that on May 28, 1956, ‘ ‘ the next business day ’ ’ after the mailing of the judgment, ‘ ‘ a surety company bond in full compliance with the provisions of the Civil Practice Act providing for surety bonds on appeal ” was obtained and that a copy of the bond and a copy of a notice of appeal were delivered to the defendant law firm in the late afternoon of that day, and the “ papers ” were filed the following day, and that immediately upon the service of the bond and the notice of appeal defendants were requested to 11 release the aforesaid funds in the said bank account ”, but defendants “wilfully, wantonly, maliciously and wrongfully refused ” to do so, or to notify the bank that a bond “ staying-all further execution had been served ’ ’ and that ‘ ‘ all further proceedings ” to collect the judgment “ were stayed ”, or “to take any further steps in the furtherance of the said stay of execution.” It is then alleged that plaintiff procured an order to show cause on May 31, 1956 returnable June 1, 1956, to vacate the subpoena; that defendants “wilfully, wantonly, maliciously and wrongfully ” applied for an adjournment of [224]*224that application on the said return day ‘ ‘ for the purpose of continuing the restraint on the funds that the request for adjournment was “ not founded upon any legal ground warranting the granting of any adjournment ”, and that the request for adjournment delayed the decision of the court, “ which was not obtained until the afternoon of June 1st, 1956.” Allegations follow that the said bank account funds ‘ ‘ were the only liquid funds immediately available to these plaintiffs at this time without their undertaking additional expense ”, that defendants were fully and completely protected in their judgment to the full extent thereof and had no valid or legal reason for continuing the restraint on the funds ”, and that plaintiff suffered damage.

Prior to the 1935 revision of article 45 of the Civil Practice Act (L. 1935, ch. 630), which article deals with proceedings supplementary to judgment, lawful and proper commencement of a proceeding under that article was conditioned on prior or simultaneous issuance of execution (see Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 773, 775, 779, 780 and 785 as they read prior to the said revision), except that, beginning in 1932, by reason of the enactment of section 773-a in that year (L. 1932, ch. 452), a subpoena was permitted to be issued for service on the judgment debtor only, regardless of whether or not execution had been issued. There was no statute expressly forbidding commencement of supplementary proceedings during the operative period of a stay of execution without bond. Nevertheless, except for the proceeding under section 773-a, it was not possible to commence such proceedings lawfully and properly in a case where the judgment upon which they would be based contained such a stay against issuance of execution, at least during the operative period of the stay, and so it was not necessary for the Legislature to enact a statute expressly stating its intention that the commencement of supplementary proceedings under such circumstances was prohibited. When the Legislature enacted said section 773-a it included therein a provision that the remedy added by the section shall not be available while the enforcement of ” the basic judgment “ is stayed ”. The inclusion of that provision indicates that the Legislature was being careful to continue the practice of forbidding the commencement of supplementary proceedings upon a judgment so long as execution upon the judgment was stayed.

However, the 1935 revision, which changed the title of article 45 from Proceedings Supplementary to Execution” to Proceeding’s Supplementary To Judgment ”, eliminated the provisions making issuance of execution prerequisite to the commencement of supplementary proceedings, and also elimi[225]*225nated the provision which denied the use of the remedy afforded by section 773-a if execution on the basic judgment was stayed (see Utilities Eng. Inst. v. Mangan, 276 App. Div. 922). This was a clear indication of intention that a stay of execution without undertaking was no longer to be a bar to the commencement of supplementary proceedings and that such proceedings could be commenced independently of execution.

In contrast to what the Legislature did as to the relationship between supplementary proceedings on the one hand and executions and stays of execution without undertaking on the other hand, it continued to bar commencement of such proceedings upon the furnishing of an undertaking by the judgment debtor in connection with his appeal from the basic judgment. By the provisions of section 594 of the Civil Practice Act, upon an appeal to the Court of Appeals from a judgment for a sum of money only, or from a judgment or order directing the payment of a sum of money only, execution is stayed by furnishing an undertaking for costs and damages which might be awarded on the appeal (as to the contents of such undertaking, see § 593) and an undertaldng for payment of the judgment itself. By the provisions of section 615, upon an appeal to the Appellate Division from such a judgment or order of the Supreme Court, execution is stayed by furnishing similar undertakings.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.D.2d 221, 159 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1957 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bono-sawdust-supply-co-v-hahn-golin-nyappdiv-1957.