Fassett v. Tallmadge

14 Abb. Pr. 188
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Abb. Pr. 188 (Fassett v. Tallmadge) 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
Fassett v. Tallmadge, 14 Abb. Pr. 188 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

Mullin, J.

The motion is for an attachment against the defendant Tallmadge, for disobedience of a judgment in this court requiring him to pay over moneys found in his hands, and which ought to be paid over to the receiver.

It is claimed by the plaintiff’s counsel that an attachment is, under the Revised Statutes, the proper process against any party who refuses or neglects to obey an order or judgment of the court.

The attachment alluded to is the process which courts are authorized to employ to punish those who are guilty of contemning its authority. It directs the imprisonment of the party, either for a definite term, or until the duty required to be done is performed.

The defendant was made a party to this suit, because it was charged that the other defendants had made to him a fraudulent assignment of their property, in order to reach such property or its proceeds. The fraud has been proved, and that the defendant Tallmadge held a large sum of money which he ought and which he has been required to pay over to the receiver.

Is this a contempt which the court is authorized to punish by imprisonment ? It seems to me not; for if it is, then every disobedience of the judgment of the court requiring the payment of money must be also a contempt, without reference to the question whether it does or does not arise out of contract.

The Non-imprisonment Act applies to the Court of Chancery as well as to the courts of common law. And the statutes which prescribe the cases in which parties may be now imprisoned, apply to the court sitting in equity as well as when it is administering the common law.

Accordingly, it is provided by § 285 of the Code of Procedure, that when a judgment requires the payment of money or the delivery of real or personal property, the same can be enforced in those respects by execution as provided in this title. When [190]*190it requires the performance of any other act, a certified copy of the judgment may be served upon the party against whom it is given, or the person or officer who is required thereby, or by law, to obey the same, and his obedience thereto enforced. If he refuse, he may be punished by the court as for a contempt.

This section provides a mode of enforcing every judgment. And there is neither reason nor necessity for resorting to attachment while the ordinary process of the court is amply sufficient.

Sections 289 and 290 of the Code regulate the form of the execution.

This defendant is, I presume, liable to be imprisoned on execution in this cause. Fraud is charged and proved, and in such an action the body of the defendant may be arrested and imprisoned. (3 Rev. Stat., 126, § 1, et seq.; Code, § 179.)

But before an execution against the body can issue, an execution against the property must be returned unsatisfied in whole or in part. (Code, § 288.)

This has not been done, and hence an execution against the body would be irregular.

The only provision of the Revised Statutes relating to con-tempts, under which it can be claimed an attachment in this case could issue, is subd. 3 of § 8, 3 Rev. Stat., 470, which provides that every court shall have power to punish, as for a criminal contempt, persons guilty of “ wilful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued or made by it.”

This case does not fall within this subdivision. In this cáse it is a judgment, not an order, of the court which has been disobeyed ; and as the section of the Code has declared in what cases disobedience of a judgment is a. contempt, and this not being one of them, I am quite clear that this motion cannot be granted.

The Court of Chancery moulded its process to meet the necessities of each case. It was not bound down, as the courts now are, by a prescribed statutory form of process, and therefore the decisions of that court afford us no light on this subject.

It is urged that an execution will not meet the exigencies of this case, as the money directed to be paid is not required to be paid to the plaintiff, but to the receiver for third persons.

I am unable to discover how this obviates the necessity of a [191]*191compliance with the statute as to the form of process. All the difficulties suggested can be obviated by notice to the sheriff and the party, and are no more in the way than an assignment to any third person is of a judgment after its rendition.

II. Appeal from an order setting aside an execution- against the person. After this decision of Mr. Justice Mullin, the plaintiff issued execution against the property of Tallmadge, to collect the money directed by the judgment to be paid to the receiver, which was returned unsatisfied; the plaintiff then, without obtaining leave of the court, issued an execution against the person of Tallmadge. The latter execution was set aside on motion by Mr. Justice Clerke. The plaintiff appealed from this order. Dorman B. Eaton and W. C. Hornfager, for the appellant. I. This was an action in which the defendant might have been arrested before judgment, and fraud having been found in the judgment, execution against his person was fully authorized without any special order. (Code, §§ 179, 181, 288; Fake a. Edgerton, 3 Abbotts’ Pr., 229.) 1. The Code, uniting law and equity proceedings, has reduced decrees and judgments, precepts and executions, to a common form. (Code, §§ 245, 283, 285-289.) 2. It is clear this execution was issued on a “judgment for the payment of money,” and all laws in conflict with the Code are repealed. (Ib., §§ 235, 285, 289.) 3. Indeed, under the chancery proceeding before the Code, a precept was only a form of execution, and was properly called an execution. (People a. Nevins, 1 Hill, 154,169 ; Van Wezel a. Van Wezel, 3 Paige, 38, 43.) 4. An execution was the proper remedy before the Code under the Revised Statutes. (3 Rev. Stat., 5 ed., 849, 850; Laws of 1847, ch. 390, §§ 2, 3.) II. The execution in this case was issued on a final judgment, not on an order. (Code, §§ 245, 400.) It was properly so issued, and the order should be reversed with costs. Elbridge T. Gerry and William Curtis Noyes, for the respondent. There being no judgment in favor of the plaintiff, nor any thing requiring the payment of any money to him (other than his costs which have heen collected), there was no warrant or authority for issuing an execution against the pei-son or otherwise.

[191]*191The motion is denied with $10 costs.

II. But independently of this, the execution was irregular. 1. There was no preliminary order to arrest before judgment. (Code, §§ 178, 179, 181, 288; Humphrey a. Brown, 17 How. Pr., 481; Kendenburg a. Morgan, 18 Ib., 469; Stelle a. Palmer, 11 Abbotts’ Pr., 62; Alden a. Sarson, 4 Ib., 102; Mollenaor a. Kœrner, 13 Ib., 241.) 2. Neither the pleadings nor the judgment disclose any legal ground for issuing it. (Code, §179.) 3. The judgment, as recited in it, is entirely at variance with the judgment itself. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Abb. Pr. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fassett-v-tallmadge-nysupct-1860.