Ehrlich v. Sklamberg

116 N.Y.S. 602
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedApril 15, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 116 N.Y.S. 602 (Ehrlich v. Sklamberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ehrlich v. Sklamberg, 116 N.Y.S. 602 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Briefly stated, the facts as I find and decide them areas follows: An attachment was issued in the suit of Abraham Ehrlich v. Sam Rinzler, under which the marshal levied on certain property of Rinzler, including the property involved in this suit. Sam Salman, not a party to the action in which the attachment was issued, claimed a portion of the property so attached as belonging to him, and on the 30th of September his attorney delivered to the attorney for the attaching creditor, the plaintiff in this action, the bond provided by section 85 of Municipal Court act (Laws 1902, p. 1517, c. 580) conditioned “that if in an action upon the bond, commenced within three months thereafter, the said claimant, Sam Salman, will establish that he was the general owner of the property claimed at the time of the seizure; or if he fails so to do that he will pay to the said Abraham Ehrlich the value thereof with interest, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.” This bond was served on the 30th of September, and recited that the sureties therein named, who are the defendants in this action, would justify before one of the justices of the Municipal Court on the 2d of October, 1908, and that the bond would then be presented for approval. The attorney for the attaching creditor at the time the bond was served admitted service upon the original, and indorsed the following upon th'e original:

“I hereby approve of the within undertaking both as to the form thereof and as to the sufficiency of the sureties therein named.”

He signed the same, and upon the copy which he retained he made a copy of this consent. The bond so served upon and retained by the attorney for the attaching, creditor is in evidence. The attorney for the claimant took the original bond with him, and it does not appear whether he afterwards had the bond approved by a justice or by a marshal as provided for by section 85 of the Municipal Court act. At any rate, he did not file it with the clerk of the court after the plaintiff’s attorney had signed his approval of the bond and of the [604]*604sufficiency of the sureties. On the day after the attorney for the plaintiff had been served with this bond, and had given his consent to its approval as to form and as to the sufficiency of the sureties, the defendant in the action whose property had been attached was adjudicated a bankrupt. At this time the marshal had not yet delivered the property to the claimant, Salman. Upon such adjudication of bankruptcy a receiver of the bankrupt’s property was appointed who made a demand on the marshal for the goods. The marshal thereupon transferred title to the goods, which were .in storage, to the receiver.

The claimant Salman, still claiming to be entitled to the property involved in this suit and mentioned in his undertaking given to the attaching creditor, claimed it from the receiver, and made a demand on him for the property. The receiver, upon some evidence presented to him by Salman of his alleged ownership, released whatever right he had, if any, to the goods in question upon Salman executing to him, the receiver, a bond for the protection of the receiver. Upon receiving such bond, the receiver directed that the goods which were in the storage warehouse and title to which had been transferred to the receiver by the marshal, as above mentioned, be delivered to the claimant, Salman. No order was made by the United States‘court directing this to be done. The receiver acted upon his own responsibility for what he deemed the best interests of the estate, feeling that he was secured by the bond given to him. Thereupon Salman obtained possession of the property. This action is commenced within three months after the claimant gave the bond by the attaching creditor upon such bond, as provided.by section 85; and in such action the claimant must establish that he was the general owner of the property claimed at the time of the seizure by the marshal.

I find as a fact that the claimant was not the owner of the property at the time of the seizure by the marshal, but that such property was owned by Sam Rinzler, against whom the attachment was issued. A reading and consideration of the evidence convince me that Salman was a party to a fraud to conceal the goods from the creditors óf Rinzler, and that the goods in question were taken from Rinzler’s premises and hidden in the basement of 167 Essex street, owned by a relative of his, which basement Salman claims to have hired but which is far removed from the regular place where he conducts business.

But the right of the plaintiff to recover is resisted by the defendants in this action, who are the principal and surety on the bond, upon the ground that the original bond was never approved and .filed as provided by section 85, the attorney for the claimant stating that, when he learned that the defendant Rinzler had been adjudicated a .bankrupt, he destroyed the original bond, and that as section 85 provides that the marshal must deliver the property to the claimant after the bond therein mentioned has been executed, approved, and filed, and as such bond was never approved by a marshal or justice and never filed, the claimant can avoid the effect of having served a copy of the bond and receiving a consent to its approval, particularly as it does not appear that the marshal delivered- the property to the claimant [605]*605after such bond was given, but that the claimant received the property from the receiver appointed in the bankruptcy proceeding. The failure to have the bond approved and filed cannot in my opinion be raised by the sureties. The claimant was entitled to the possession of the property on the approval of the bond by the attorney for the attaching creditor. In my opinion, when-the copy bond was delivered to the attorney for the attaching creditor, it was, so far as any act of the sureties necessary to be done to fix their liability upon the bond, complete.

The fact that another party intervened and claimed the property and released his claim thereto to the claimant' does not affect the liability of the sureties. They signed the bond with the intention that it should be kept open, and that their obligation “that if in an action upon the bond, commenced within three months thereafter, the said claimant Sam Salman will establish that he was the general owner of the property claimed at the time of the seizure; or if he fails so to do that he will pay to the said Abraham Ehrlich the value thereof with interest, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue,” should enable the claimant to get possession of the'property. At the time the copy was delivered to the attorney for the attaching creditor the original was in existence, and its subsequent' destruction either before or after the claimant got the goods, so long as he actually received them, cannot alter the liability of the sureties. The requirement of the filing was for the benefit of the plaintiff in the action, and not for the benefit of the claimant or his sureties, and the fact that the .attorney destroyed the original and did not file it after he had obtained a consent to its form and to the sufficiency of the sureties cannot be .asserted by the sureties as a defense to the bond when the claimant as it appears has actually received the benefits for which the bond was given. In my opinion the failure to have the bond approved either by a marshal or by a justice and filed was not jurisdictional, but was an irregularity which the plaintiff could waive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.Y.S. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehrlich-v-sklamberg-nynyccityct-1909.