Contact Resource Services v. Gregory

10 Misc. 3d 968
CourtRochester City Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Misc. 3d 968 (Contact Resource Services v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Rochester City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Contact Resource Services v. Gregory, 10 Misc. 3d 968 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ellen M. Yacknin, J.

Introduction

This action calls upon the court to balance the competing rights of a judgment creditor, who is legally entitled to use authorized procedures to collect a debt, and a judgment debtor, whose sole financial resources are legally exempt from seizure by the creditor. The circumstances in this action are not uncommon. Nevertheless, New York courts are rarely asked to reconcile the conflict presented here, primarily because the overwhelming majority of consumer transaction judgments in New York State are granted upon the debtor’s default.

In this case, defendant Elizabeth Gregory, one of the debtors, has appeared. She asks the court to resolve the tensions created by the collision of the parties’ respective legal rights. For the reasons discussed below, the court finds that plaintiffs use of legally authorized enforcement procedures to recover its money judgment from either defendant will be circumscribed as set forth in this decision and order.

Facts and Procedural Background

Plaintiff Contact Resource Services, LLC claims that defendants Samuel Gregory, Sr. and Elizabeth Gregory have failed to pay one or more installments on a promissory note they made on or about November 1, 1984. Specifically, plaintiff claims that defendants owe plaintiff $2,610.82, plus interest at the rate of 15.950% per annum from August 16, 2000, together with statutory costs and disbursements.

Defendant Samuel Gregory, Sr. is married to Elizabeth Gregory. However, the couple has been estranged for many years. Each maintains finances separate from the other.

Defendant Elizabeth Gregory is in her mid-50s. Ms. Gregory worked for the housekeeping department at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York, for 18 years. Due to serious health problems, she became blind. Since 1998, Ms. Gregory has been totally disabled. Her sole source of income is her limited [970]*970federal monthly Social Security disability (SSD) payment that she receives under title II of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 401 et seq.).

Ms. Gregory would like to be able to pay her debt to plaintiff. However, given her limited income, her essential living expenses, and her need for costly medications, she is unable to do so.

Ms. Gregory currently has no bank account into which her Social Security disability benefits can be deposited directly. Instead, she relies on relatives to take her to their banks to cash her monthly checks. If her relatives are not available, she pays a check cashing company to cash her check.

Ms. Gregory used to have a checking account at HSBC Bank into which her SSD benefits were deposited directly every month. However, when a prior judgment creditor imposed a restraining notice on her account, she was forced to pay $550 to both her bank and the creditor to obtain access to her money. After that experience, Ms. Gregory closed her bank account.

Because of her blindness and other health problems, Ms. Gregory’s inability to have immediate and direct access to her SSD benefits causes her particular difficulties. Ms. Gregory must wait each month until her check is cashed before she has the money to pay her expenses. In addition, after cashing her check each month, she feels compelled to carry all her cash with her to prevent its loss or theft.

Ms. Gregory would like to open a bank account into which her Social Security disability payments once again can be deposited directly every month. What presently concerns Ms. Gregory is that if she does so, plaintiffs debt collection efforts could result in the unnecessary freezing of her account and the imposition of unaffordable bank charges that she will be forced to pay out of her Social Security disability income.

Procedural Background

Plaintiff Contact Resources, LLC has moved for summary judgment against defendants Samuel Gregory, Sr. and Elizabeth Gregory for the amount of $2,610.82, plus 15.950% annual interest from August 16, 2000, plus costs and disbursements. Defendant Samuel Gregory, Sr. neither appeared nor responded to plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. Defendant Elizabeth Gregory appeared by her attorney, but does not challenge plaintiffs assertions regarding her debt. Plaintiff is therefore [971]*971entitled to summary judgment against defendants for the amount sought.2

While she does not dispute her debt, Elizabeth Gregory moves for a protective order under CPLR 5240. She maintains that because her only financial resources are her limited Social Security disability benefits, plaintiffs use of a restraining notice to enforce its money judgment against her should be restricted.

Legal Analysis

The Social Security Act’s “anti-attachment” provision, 42 USC § 407 (a), protects Social Security benefits against “execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process.” The Supreme Court has observed that section 407 “imposes a broad bar against the use of any legal process to reach all security benefits.” (Philpott v Essex County Welfare Bd., 409 US 413, 417 [1973]; accord Bennett v Arkansas, 485 US 395 [1988]; In re Buren, 725 F2d 1080, 1084 [6th Cir 1984], cert denied sub nom. Hildebrand v Social Security Admin., 469 US 818 [1984].) The “anti-attachment” provision recognizes that because Social Security payments are intended to meet the beneficiaries’ most basic needs, those funds must be immune from creditors unless Congress expressly provides otherwise. (See In re Buren, 725 F2d at 1084 [citing legislative history]; Dionne v Bouley, 757 F2d 1344, 1355 [1st Cir 1985].) Accordingly, Elizabeth Gregory’s Social Security disability income is exempt from seizure by creditors, and plaintiff is barred from using enforcement mechanisms to collect its judgment from her SSD benefits. (See State of New York v Jacobs, 167 AD2d 876, 876-877 [4th Dept 1990].)

Notwithstanding section 407 (a)’s broad proscription, Ms. Gregory seeks additional protection from the court. Her concerns arise from the fact that when a creditor attempts to collect a money judgment from a debtor, New York law gives the creditor the right to serve a restraining notice on a debtor’s bank. (See CPLR 5222.) This restraining notice forbids the bank from releasing any funds in the debtor’s bank account to

“any person other than the sheriff . . . except upon direction of the sheriff or pursuant to an order of [972]*972the court, until the expiration of one year after the notice is served upon him or her, or until the judgment or order is satisfied or vacated, whichever event first occurs.” (CPLR 5222 [b].)

New York’s restraining notice provision does not require a creditor to ensure that there are nonexempt funds in a debtor’s bank account before serving a restraining notice. Therefore, by serving a restraining notice on a debtor’s bank, a creditor can freeze a debtor’s bank account and prevent a debtor from withdrawing his or her funds even when the only funds in the debtor’s account are exempt from seizure.

When the only funds in a judgment debtor’s bank account are exempt from seizure, the restraining notice accomplishes no useful function for the creditor. To the contrary, such a restraining notice serves only to harm particularly vulnerable individuals who, like Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Krebs v. Cabrera
78 A.D.3d 904 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Misc. 3d 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/contact-resource-services-v-gregory-nyroccityct-2005.