Gibbons v. Bush Co.

115 A.D. 619, 101 N.Y.S. 721, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3023
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 16, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 A.D. 619 (Gibbons v. Bush Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbons v. Bush Co., 115 A.D. 619, 101 N.Y.S. 721, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3023 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Hooker, Rich and Miller, JJ. concurred.

The following is the opinion of the referee:

Carr, Referee:

The motion to dismiss the complaint in this action lias been argued so elaborately and briefed by both counsel with so much industry that I feel it my duty to, make a short expression of the views which have determined my course in deciding the motion. This motion is made on two grounds, as follows: First, that the causes of action set up in the complaint of the plaintiff are barred ' by the judgment in a prior action brought by him against the same defendant. Second, that the causes of action set up in the eomplaint are barred by the Statute of Limitations.

Both of these defenses are set up in the answer of the defendant and their effect is properly before me at this moment, both as a matter of directing the order of proof which is vested in me as referee, and by the express consent of the respective counsel. In arriving at my determination to dismiss .the complaint, I have not thought it necessary to base my action upon the first • ground of objection. I am not prepared to say that the present cause of action is not to a very great extent barred by the former judgment, still I do not feel so strongly impelled to dismiss the complaint oh that ground alone. It is certainly the ca.se that the present cause'of action was at one time one of the causes of action before the court in the prior suit, and that it would have been within the power and duty of the court in the prior suit to have decided this cause of action if it had not been voluntarily discontinued by the plaintiff. .Numerous authorities may be cited to the effect that under such circumstances the former judgment is a bar to the trial of this action. I feel con[621]*621strained, however, by the recent opinion of the Appellate Division in Koeppel v. Macbeth (97 App. Div. 299), and, therefore, do not decide the motion upon that point. As to the second ground, namely, the Statute of Limitations, I cannot escape from the conclusion that either the cause of action set up in this complairit is barred by the Statute of Limitations or that the plaintiff in this action is not the real party in interest and cannot maintain this action. It appears that the cause of action set forth in the present complaint had matured prior to June 1, 1896, and that the. present action was brought by the service of a summons on October 15, 1902, leaving a period of six years four months and fifteen days as having elapsed since the cause of action matured. The defendants have pleaded the Statute of Limitations; and it has become incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish such facts or circumstances as take his causes of action out of the scope" of the statute. This burden he has attempted to discharge by showing that on the 2oth day of May, 1900, an order was entered in the Supreme Court in Kings county in the action of William Keen-nan against Richard Gibbons, appointing Daniel E. Delevan Receiver of all the property, debts, equitable interest, rights and things in action, effects and estate, real and personal, of the said Richard Gibbons, the judgment debtor, and all sums owing to him.” This injunction order further provided as follows: “ And said defendant, the judgment debtor, his agents and attorneys, and all others are hereby forbidden from making or suffering any transfer or other disposition of or interference with the property of the said judment debtor, or in which said debtor is in any wise interested, excepting in obedience to this order, until the further order and direction of this Court in the premises.” This order appointing a receiver appears to have been made in proceedings supplementary to execution against Richard Gibbons in an action brought against him as an individual to recover an-individual obligation. At the time 'of its entry, and long prior thereto, Richard Gibbons was the surviving partner of a firm known as M. Gibbons & Son. M. Gibbons had died, leaving the partnership affairs to be administered by the survivor, Richard Gibbons. It is contended by the plaintiff in this "action that the injunction clause contained in the order appointing the receiver applied to [622]*622him as a surviving partner of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son, and restrained him from commencing any action against this defendant, or any other person, to recover any debts or obligations claimed to be due to the copartnership of M. Gibbons & Son; and that, therefore, under section 406 of the Code of Civil Procedure the Statute of Limitations did not run against him as a surviving partner of M.'.Gibbons & Son as long as this injunction order stood unvacated. -It appears in this case that the injunction'order in question is still unvacated. In that event the present action is brought in contempt of the injunction order, if that order applies. It has been held that notwithstanding an action has been brought in contempt of an order of injunction the fact of such contempt is no defense to the action, and that the matter of the contempt and the punishment therefor is one which concerns alone the court which granted the order. (Wilkinson v. First Nat. Fire Ins. Co., 72 N. Y. 499.) At the same time it is quite apjiarent to me that the injunction clause in the order appointing the receiver was simply auxiliary to the appointment of the receiver and covered only such property of the defendant judgment debtor, whether tangible or dioses in action, as was vested in the receiver by virtue of the order appointing him. It has been held repeatedly that all in junction orders are to be construed in favor of the purpose sought to be sub-served by the granting of the order, and that, no matter how general the terms of the order in question, it was not to be construed in such a manner as to prevent any action on the part of the party enjoined which in no wise concerned the party procuring the injunction or which would have redounded to the advantage of such party. (Wilkinson v. First Nat. Fire Ins. Co., supra; Van Wagonen v. Terpenning, 122 id. 222.) notwithstanding the general language of this injunction order, it is quite apparent that it would not have restrained the action of Richard Gibbons as an executor, or as an administrator or as the trustee of an express trust. If either would it have restrained his action as a surviving partner of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son, unless his legal title to the dioses .in action of M. Gibbons & Son was of ’such a character as to be divested from him. and transferred to the receiver by virtue'of the entry of the order iii question. The learned counsel for the plaintiff has submitted several authorities which he claims declare [623]*623the rule that a surviving partner takes all the assets and choses in action of the copartnership by virtue of a legal title, subject only to a duty to account to the personal representatives of the deceased copartner and to the creditors of the copartnership ; and that such legal title may be reached and controlled in proceedings supplementary to an execution against him individually. If this view be carried to the extent to which it is urged by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, then the assets and choses in action of the firm of M. Gibbons & Son were so vested in Bichard Gibbons, as surviving partner, as to be transferable from him to his individual receiver, subject to a duty upon the part of such receiver to account to the partnership creditors and the representatives of the deceased partner.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A.D. 619, 101 N.Y.S. 721, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbons-v-bush-co-nyappdiv-1906.