Durant v. Supervisors of Albany

26 Wend. 66
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 26 Wend. 66 (Durant v. Supervisors of Albany) 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
Durant v. Supervisors of Albany, 26 Wend. 66 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinions were delivered:

Mr. Justice Cowen considered the case within the equity of the statute allowing creditors’ bills after the return of executions unsatisfied. That statute, he said, is remedial, and should be construed by its equity. He referred to Dwarris on Statutes, 718 to 721, where numerous cases are collected wherein remedial acts have been extended to [75]*75cases and persons not within the words of the acts. He also mentioned Simonton v. Barrell, 21 Wendell 362, where a statute authorizing a new execution or other process after the discharge of a defendant from arrest on a ca. sa, was held to authorize an action of debt on the judgment.

He also examined the objection that the proper parties had not sued; and concluded by observing, that though the question was not free of difficulty, the balance of the law was in favor of the decree, and he was of opinion that it should be affirmed.

By Senator Humphrey.

I have examined this case with the care required by the important question it involves. The object sought by the complainants is to enforce the payment of the ordinary taxes, imposed on the defendant for the support of the government. His ability to satisfy the charge is conceded. His obligation to do so cannot be denied. His refusal to pay is alleged and admitted; and the question arises whether he can be compelled in the mode now proposed to fulfil the duties imposed upon every citizen, and to contribute his quota to the maintenance of the government under which he lives. The decision of this question is important in every aspect, and particularly so in its bearing upon the financial condition and resources of our state. The case presented is a single instance, but it is easy to foresee that if it be successful it may have many imitations.

I cannot concur in the apprehensions which have been expressed as to the extension of the jurisdiction of the Chancellor. His decisions may all be reviewed by us to a much greater extent than the decisions of the supreme court, and it is much more important to inquire whether he has acted well and wisely in a given case, than to censure him for having acted at all. I agree with the counsel for the appellant that there is no remedy at law for the collection of these taxes. The authorities cited by him [76]*76seem fully to maintain his position, that where a right is given by statute, and a remedy for the violation of it is prescribed at the same time, the statute remedy and no 0^er must be pursued. It follows that the complainants were right in pursuing the statute remedy, as they have done to every available extent, and that they cannot bring an action at law to recover the amount of these taxes and that therefore all the legal remedies of the complainants are exhausted. This brings the case to the question which the Chancellor says it presents, viz: “ whether a wealthy individual, taxed on account of his personal estate, can escape from his liability for the payment of the tax, if he thinks proper to invest his funds in bonds and mortgages, or other property which cannot be distrained or sold under the supervisors’ warrant to the collector.” Can then, the payment of taxes be evaded in this way 1 If it can, the rule will work very unequally. The farmer, whose implements of husbandry, and the mechanic the tools of whose trade can be seized by the tax gatherer, will not only pay their own taxes, but will be obliged to make good the deficiencies of those who have thousands of dollars at interest but no property tangible by a collector’s warrant.

The complainants insist that their claim should be regarded as analogous to a judgment, and that the same relief should be extended to them, on a failure to collect, by virtue of the collector’s warrant, as the statute extends to judgment creditors in certain cases. 2 R. S. 173, § 38. It is admitted that this case is not within the terms of the statute, but the complainants urge that the Chancellor had the same jurisdiction which the statute gives, previous to its enactment, or that at all events the statute is remedial and should be extended to this case by analo • gy. It is obvious from an examination of the cases cited on both sides, that long previous to the Revised Statutes, Chancellor Kent repeatedly claimed a power as existing in the court of chancery, to decree that an execution re[77]*77turned unsatisfied, on a judgment at law, should he satisfied out of the defendant’s equitable effects: not on the ground of fraud or trust, but as a distinct branch of equity-jurisdiction. 2 Johns. Ch. R. 283,296: 4 Id. 687. that in this view of the law he was sustained by the late Chancellor Lansing, Chief Justice Spencer, and Judge Woodworth. See Hadden v. Spader, 20 Johns. R. 554. Although Chancellor Sanford refused to exercise this power, yet his successor, Chancellor Walworth, has repeatedly exerted it. 1 Paige 637; Id. 168, and 2 Id. 207. And this court have adhered to the opinion delivered by Judge Woodworth in Hadden v. Spader. In Candler v. Pettit, 1 Paige 168, Chancellor Walworth exercised this power, and although a portion of this court, when the case came before them, 3 Wendell 618, refused to express an opinion on the point, yet Senator Allen, whose strong common sense always gives great weight to his opinions, remarked as follows: “ There are several cases in which the principle has been clearly recognized that a court of chancery has the power to compel the discovery of personal property, placed by the debtor beyond the reach of legal process; and I am unable to discover any good reason, and the counsel for the appellant has adduced none, why public stocks, notes of - hand, bonds or debts of any kind, should be exempt from execution any more than other estate, whether real or personal, or why the effect of a judgment should be defeated, while the debtor may be in possession of a large property of the kind alluded to. That the principle of compelling a discovery and account of such property has been acted on by our equity courts appears from the case of Kendrick v. Robinson, 1 Johns. Dig. 205, where it was held that Chancery will lend its aid to a judgment creditor, by compelling a discovery and account against a debtor or third person, who had possession of the debtor’s property, and placed it beyond the reach of legal process. The same is the case of Hadden v. Spader; and so important has the principle been deemed [78]*78by the legislature, that it has heen incorporated in the Revised Statutes, which go into effect on the first of January5 1830. The justice and equity of this rule appears to me indisputable, for what can be more reasonable than that 1 J every man possessing the means should pay his honest debts; and if he possess the means and place them in a situation beyond the reach of legal process, is there any injustice in compelling him to render an account of the property thus fraudulently concealed 1

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Bluebook (online)
26 Wend. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durant-v-supervisors-of-albany-nysupct-1841.