Buckley v. Sharpe

114 Misc. 206
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 114 Misc. 206 (Buckley v. Sharpe) 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
Buckley v. Sharpe, 114 Misc. 206 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

This is an application by a sheriff having charge of attachments and executions against a judgment debtor for an order permitting him to deposit with the court or the clerk thereof, any and all proceeds of sales in attachments and executions previously levied by him and now in his hands to await the determination of conflicting rights and priorities of the various attaching and execution creditors.

It is unnecessary to review all of the facts and) details in relation to these various attachments and executions. It is sufficient that the plaintiff has recovered a judgment and has issued an execution which is in the hands of the sheriff and that there are sufficient funds to pay the plaintiff’s judgment in full, but con[208]*208flict has arisen over the right of the plaintiff to enjoy the proceeds of such execution. The sheriff has been served with a notice by George B. Little, as trustee, under a trust agreement purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff under which he claims to be entitled to the money due on the plaintiff’s judgment and execution. The claim of the plaintiff is that the alleged agreement was abandoned. This, however, seems to be denied by the trustee, who is pressing his claim to the right, as such trustee, to the moneys due under the plaintiff’s judgment and execution.

Notice of the sheriff’s application for this order has apparently been given to the various judgment creditors of Albert G. Buckley, judgment debtor.

The attorneys for the plaintiff in the action of Buckley v. Sharpe raise the point that the court has no power to entertain such a motion and to direct the payment of the money into court as prayed for by the sheriff, and they contend that the sheriff has no option under the Code but to pay the money in satisfaction of the judgments in the order of priority in which the warrants of attachment were issued.

My investigation with reference to this contention demonstrates what is occasionally the case, that a proposition of law has been sp thoroughly settled over such a long period of time that the principle of the law has been lost to view so completely that it is not easy to find the authorities sustaining it.

It is the well settled law of this state that it is the duty of the sheriff, not only to collect the moneys due upon an execution by the return day thereof, but to bring the same into court, or pay the same over to the plaintiff or his attorney by such return day. This alternative remedy of the sheriff to bring the moneys into court has apparently existed from early times in this state and is the law of the state today. Crocker [209]*209Sheriffs (3d ed.), § 424; Smith Sheriffs, 405; Nelson v. Kerr, 59 N. Y. 224; Mills v. Davis, 53 id. 349; Parker v. Bradley, 46 N. Y. Super. Ct. 244; Phillips v. Wheeler, 2 Hun, 603; affd., 67 N. Y. 104; Brewster v. Van Ness, 18 Johns. 133; Code Civ. Pro. § 1366.

The story leading up to the establishment of this principle is well set forth in Smith on Sheriffs, Coroners and Constables at page 405. In as much as this work was published in 1883 and may not be available generally a quotation from the same may be valuable. It reads as follows:

“ Disposition of Proceeds.— Formerly, in strictness, moneys collected upon an execution by a sheriff were to be brought into court. Afterward it became a sufficient answer for a sheriff, when sued for not bringing the moneys into court, to say that he had paid them over into the hands of the execution creditor. And, latterly, the general practice has been to pay the proceeds to the execution creditor, or to his attorney. There is no statute governing the subject, and, in this regard, expressly pointing out the sheriff’s duty. But the practice has been from the earlier times, for the sheriff to bring the money into court. And this practice is good even at the present time. If there cam, be no doubt as to who is entitled to the proceeds, the sheriff should pay them over to the one entitled to receive them, or to his attorney. But if there be doubt, if there be adverse claimants of the proceeds, the sheriff is not bound, at his peril, to determine the matter, nor 'need he apply to the court for direction and protection. He may, with the execution and as part of the return thereof, deliver the proceeds to the clerk of the county where the execution is to be returned. This is a payment of the money into court. Under the Code the money might be paid by the sheriff directly to the county treasurer, [210]*210It is better, however, to return the money with the execution to the county clerk, when it is desired to bring the proceeds into court.”

The leading authority cited by Smith as sustaining the foregoing is the case of Nelson v. Kerr, supra, in which the Court of Appeals, per Andrews, J. says: “ Since the case of Brewster v. Van Ness, the doctrine there stated has been considered the settled law in ,this State, and no case has been cited in which it has been questioned. Nor is it perceived that the change in the form of the execution, since the Code, calls for any change of the rule declared in that case. The sheriff has the same means of protecting himself from liability. He may still bring the money into court with his writ, or pay it over to the plaintiff in the execution. The clerks of the several counties are clerks of the court, and the clerk with whom the judgment roll is filed, and where the execution is to be returned, is the proper officer to receive the money, and payment by a sheriff to him is payment into court. If paid to him, he holds it for the party' entitled to receive it. There is no statute authorizing a sheriff to pay money collected on execution into court, nor, so far as I know, has there ever been, but the practice has prevailed from early times. In Bacon’s Abridgment (tit. Execution, C.), it is said: ‘ Upon a writ of fi. fa., the sheriff cannot deliver the goods of the defendant to the plaintiff in satisfaction of his debt, but the goods are to be sold, and the money, in strictness, is to be brought into court.’

“It is true that the sheriff, by the former writ in use in this State, was commanded to bring the money ‘ before our justice, ’ etc., on the return day, and so were the ancient precedents. But we have not found any authority for the proposition that the mandate of the writ was the sole ground upon which the sheriff [211]*211was entitled to bring the money into court, in discharge of his liability. Forms of writs furnish strong evidence of what the law was when they were devised, and of the duty of the officer to whom they are directed. And it may well be supposed that the right of the sheriff to bring money collected on process into court, was established when the precedents of executions referred to were framed, in view of the manifest justice or convenience of the practice. 'Section 290 of the Code declares that an execution shall be .returnable within sixty days after its receipt by the officer, to the clerk with whom the record of judgment is filed. This is the only section defining the duty of the sheriff upon the subject, and under it the sheriff may, I think, pay the money collected to the clerk, as a part of the return therein provided, although no special mention is made of it in the writ.”

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Related

Nelson v. . Kerr
59 N.Y. 224 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Phillips v. . Wheeler
67 N.Y. 104 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
Wilson v. Wright
9 How. Pr. 459 (New York Supreme Court, 1854)
Brewster v. Van Ness
18 Johns. 133 (New York Supreme Court, 1820)

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Bluebook (online)
114 Misc. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckley-v-sharpe-nysupct-1921.