Dunham v. . Reilly

18 N.E. 89, 110 N.Y. 366, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 36, 65 Sickels 366, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 885
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 N.E. 89 (Dunham v. . Reilly) 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
Dunham v. . Reilly, 18 N.E. 89, 110 N.Y. 366, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 36, 65 Sickels 366, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 885 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The question in this case arises upon a demurrer. The complaint sets out what is claimed to be a cause of action against the defendant, who was sheriff of the city and county of New York, for a false return. It avers that, on the 6th day of January, 1879, the plaintiffs recovered four judgments against one Rogers and others, in the New York Marine Court, which were duly filed in the office of the clerk of said court, but transcripts of which were not filed, nor said judgments docketed in the office of the clerk of the city and county of New York until the 9th day of January, 1880; that on said 6th day of January, 1879, executions on said judgments were issued to the sheriff of said city and county in the usual form of executions against property; that on the 8th day of March, 1879, these executions were returned by the sheriff nulla bona, which return was false. The demurrer interposed to this complaint raises the question of the validity of the executions issued to the sheriff, and, if invalid, whether they were wholly void or merely irregular or voidable, and whether their defective character reheves the sheriff from liability for the falsity of the return. The Special Term sustained the demurrer, but the General Term reversed that judgment, and pronounced the executions valid and regular. This result was reached by holding that the validity of the process was determined by the Marine Court act of 1875 (Chap. 479, § 53), and not by the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure (§§ 1365, 1369), and that is the first and principal inquiry in the case.

The act of 1875, was expressly repealed in the repealing act of 1877, except section 41 and sections 43 to 52 inclusive, and sections 54 and 55. (Laws of 1877, chap. 417, § 1, subd. 49.) This repeal blotted out section 53 of the act of 1875, which is the provision relied upon, and which enacted that the execution on any judgment of the Marine Court must be *370 directed to the sheriff, although it also permitted execution to be issued to any one of the marshals of the city, but limited their power to the levy upon and sale of personal property only. Under this section it had been held, by the Common Pleas, that an execution upon a judgment of the Marine Court might issue at once to the sheriff, and a transcript and docket in the county clerk’s office were only necessary to effect a lien upon real estate. (Palmer v. Clark, 4 Abb. N. C. 25.) The repeal of section 53 of the act of 1875, however, carried down with it the authority derived from that section, and deprives the conclusion of the General Term of the foundation upon which it was built. When the executions against Rodgers were issued their validity could gain no support from a statute which had been repealed, and we must look elsewhere for the authority by which they are to be tested. The repealing act of 1877 was of course, intended to dispense with statutes made needless by or inconsistent with the Code of Civil Procedure, the first thirteen chapters of which were passed at the previous legislative session. By that Code the issue of executions by courts of record was regulated. The Marine Court" was a court of record (Laws of 1872, chap. 629, § 1; Code Civ. Pro. § 2, subd. 15), and so its final process was brought within that regulation. (Code Civ. Pro. chap. 13, §§ 1365 and 1369.) The Code, by its terms, was to take effect on the first day of May, 1877. The temporary act of 1876 (chap. 449), was passed to explain, define and regulate the application of the Code, and contained this provision: Chapter thirteenth applies only to an execution issued on or after the 1st day of May, 1877, out of a court of record, other than an execution issued out of such a court and directed, pursuant to law, to a marshal or constable, and to sales and other proceedings by virtue of an execution directed to a sheriff, and delivered to him after that date.” Both the Code and the temporary act were suspended in their operation until the 1st day of September, 1877, but, on that day, went into effect. At that date the situation was this : The fifty-third section of the Marine Court act of 1875, regulating the issue *371 of its executions had been repealed; chapter 13 of the new Code had been made applicable to all executions issued out of any court of record, other than those issued to a constable or marshal, and so governed all executions issued out of a court of record to a sheriff, on and after September 1,1877; and the executions issued in 1879, to the present defendant, were, therefore, controlled by the provisions of the Code. Its last nine chapters were passed in 1880, and section 3347 in subdivision 10, contains a repetition, in precise words, of the pro. vision we have cited from the temporary act; and the General Term concede that in the year 1880 there was a repeal of the act of 1875, and which brought Marine Court executions, issued to the sheriff, within the control of the Code. The mistake was in the supposition that such change never took place until 1880, whereas, as we.have seen, section 53 of the act of 1875, was expressly repealed in 1877, and section 3347 of the Code was only a repetition of the previous identical enactment in the temporary act of the same year. The error is quite excusable in view of the confused tangle of legislation on the subject, and, more especially, because by the repealing act of 1880, chapter 479 of the Laws of 1875, with the exception of a single section, is repealed generally, without allusion to the circumstance that most of its sections had been destroyed by express enactment three years earlier. It follows, necessarily, that the right to issue the executions, for a false return of which the sheriff is sued, must be tested by the provisions of the Code.

Those provisions are quite explicit and peremptory. By section 1365 it is enacted that executions against property “ Gam, be issued only to a county in the clerk’s office of which the judgment is docketed.” The power to issue the process is given where in some county there is the prescribed docket, and only in that event. The language seems to involve both an authority and a prohibition; an authority where the judgment is docketed in any county to issue the execution to that county; and a prohibition, couched in the word “ only ” against any such issue to a county in whose clerk’s office there is no such docket. The further provisions which regulate the form *372 and dictate the contents of the execution are framed in harmony with this prohibition and on the assumption that it would be obeyed. Section 1367 directs that “ where an execution is issued out of a court, other than that in which the judgment was rendered, upon filing a transcript of the judgment rendered in the latter court, it must also specify the clerk with whom the transcript is filed and the time of filing, and it must be made returnable to that clerk; ” and section 1369 enacts that an execution against property must, if the judgment-roll is not filed in the clerk’s office of the county to which it is issued, specify the time when the judgment was docketed in that county.” The execution issued to the sheriff in this case violated all these essential provisions and fell within the definition of void process given in Fischer v. Langbein, (103 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.E. 89, 110 N.Y. 366, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 36, 65 Sickels 366, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-v-reilly-ny-1888.