Hall v. Kellogg

13 Barb. 603, 1852 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Barb. 603 (Hall v. Kellogg) 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
Hall v. Kellogg, 13 Barb. 603, 1852 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

Marvin, J.

The plaintiffs claim that by their superior diligence in making a demand of their debtor McKnight, and obtaining a warrant to arrest him, they have acquired a right to priority in the payment of their debt, over all the other creditors of McKnight. The question is important, and its determination must depend upon the construction to be given to the non-imprisonment act

[606]*606The first section of the act prohibits the arrest or imprisonment of any person upon any demand founded on contract. The second section makes some exceptions; then follow sections three to nine inclusive, providing a new or substituted remedy in certain cases. A plaintiff who has commenced a suit, or obtained a judgment or decree against the defendant, in any court of record, may apply to officers named, for a warrant to arrest the defendant in such suit. He is to adduce to the officer satisfactory evidence that there is a debt or demand due to him from the defendant, amounting to more than $50, for which, by the provisions of the act, the defendant cannot be arrested or imprisoned, and he must establish one or more of certain particulars specified in the act. The officer is then to issue his warrant in behalf of the people of this state,” commanding the officer to arrest the person named in the warrant, &c. The person so arrested may, before the officer, controvert any of the facts and circumstances upon which the warrant issued, and may verify his allegations by his own affidavit. If he does so, the complainant may examine such defendant on oath. The officer is to receive such other proof as the parties may offer. He. may adjourn the hearing. He may issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of witnesses. If the officer is satisfied that the allegations of the complainant are substantiated, and that the defendant has done, or is about to do, any one of the acts specified in the fourth section of the act, he shall, by a commitment under bis hand, direct that such defendant be committed to the jail of the county to be there detained until he shall be discharged according to law, and such defendant shall be committed and detained accordingly. The tenth section provides that such commitment shall not be granted if the defendant shall do either of certain things specified, to which I shall soon advert.

It is insisted that the proceedings before the officer are exclusively for the benefit of the creditor upon whose complaint the debtor was arrested, and that in no event can the other creditors have any interest in or be in any wise benefited by these proceedings. It will be noticed, on reading the provisions of the act above referred to, that the plaintiff and defendant, the com[607]*607plainant and the person arrested, are named, and there is no language in the act thus far, indicating that any other persons or creditors are interested in the prosecution before the officer: but with section 10, the act, I think, begins to speak a different language; and in my opinion it is very important to notice this change, as the proper construction of the statute depends upon it. The judge, upon the inquiry before him, having determined that the allegations' of the complaint are substantiated, and having directed the commitment of the defendant, the 10th and following sections of the act provide certain modes of averting the commitment, to be adopted by the defendant. He has the right, by the statute, to become an actor. He may, if he chooses, remain passive, and he will then be committed to jail, but .the prosecuting creditor will have acquired no interest in, or lien upon his property by the proceedings. He will simply have procured his imprisonment. The debtor may avert the imprisonment by doing one of several things. Here then he has an election. He may 1, pay the debt or demand claimed, with the costs, &c.; or 2, he may give security, that the debt or demand, of .the plaintiff, &e. shall be paid within ,sixty days; or 3, he may “ make and deliver to such officer an inventory of his estate and an account of his creditors, and execute an assignment of his property, as hereinafter provided, upon which the same proceedings shall be had as upon a petition of such defendant in the manner hereinafter directed, except that no notice to the plaintiff shall be requisite, and no adjournment shall be granted for more than three days, except at the instance of the defendant, and a discharge shall be granted in the like cases and with the same effect.” 4. He may enter into a bond to the complainant, with sureties, conditioned that he will within thirty days apply for an assignment of his property and for a discharge, as provided in the subsequent sections of the act, &c. &c. It is not necessary to notice the 5th subdivision as amended. If the debtor elects to pay the debt, or give security for the payment in sixty days, the proceedings upon the warrant will have enured exclusively for the benefit of the creditor upon whose complaint he was arrested. The debtor may be entirely solvent and able [608]*608to pay the debt at once, and if he does so then the proceedings are at an end. Or he may be solvent and able to give security to pay in sixty days. If he gives such security, then he is discharged and the proceedings are ended. Again, if he gives the bond mentioned in the 4th subdivision and shall fail to perform the condition, then the creditor upon whose complaint he was arrested may sue upon the bond. No other creditor can maintain suit upon it, and in this event the proceedings upon the warrant will have resulted exclusively for his benefit. No discharge under the act will, however, have been granted to the debtor in either of these cases. But suppose the debtor finds himself insolvent, and desires that his property shall be applied to the payment of his debts, and that he may be discharged, and protected from further molestation on account of any of the acts or frauds specified in the 4th section. He may; as we have seen, by the 3d subdivision of section 10, execute an assignment.” In the present case McKnight elected to make this assignment, and the question is, who are to partake the fruits of it? Are the plaintiffs to be paid their entire debt to the exclusion of the other creditors, or have the other creditor's a right to share in the distribution ; and if so, what creditors ?

Having come to the conclusion, after much and careful examination of the statute, that it was never intended to give to the creditor, upon whose complaint the debtor is arrested, the benefit of the assignment, which the debtor may elect to make, to the exclusion of all other creditors, I shall proceed to examine, as briefly as may be, the provisions of that statute; a statute, it must be confessed, very defective and obscure. It is important to keep in mind the object of the legislature in enacting the law. It was to abolish arrest or imprisonment for debt, except in a few cases specified. It was apprehended, if the creditor was deprived of the remedy by imprisonment, to coerce the payment of debts, that fraudulent debtors might set their creditors at defiance. The legislature, therefore, provided the new substituted remedy of arrest upon a warrant, and the proceedings before an officer, to be resorted to when the creditor could establish any one or more of certain particulars specified, and which [609]*609are referred to in section 17, as frauds. Upon establishing any one or more of those particulars, the creditor may procure the arrest of the debtor, and this may result in imprisonment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Barb. 603, 1852 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-kellogg-nysupct-1852.