Holbrook v. Orgler

49 How. Pr. 289
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 How. Pr. 289 (Holbrook v. Orgler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Orgler, 49 How. Pr. 289 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Monell, C. J.

The power of a justice of the marine court to make an order for the examination of a judgment debtor," and in that proceeding to appoint a receiver of the debtor’s property, must depend upon the construction and force to be given to the seventh section of the act of 1874, entitled “An act in relation to the marine court of the city of Hew York” (laws of 1874, chapter 545).

Previous to the passage of that statute there was no such power.

The section referred to provides that: “ In all cases when judgment shall be recovered in said court, all proceedings supplementary to execution on said judgment, under the provisions of the Code, if had in the city of Hew York, shall be had and completed in the said marine court in the same manner and with like effect in every particular as now allowed by law in other courts of. record; and all provisions of law relating to such proceedings shall apply to said marine court as fully as they now apply to any other court of record.”

Under that statute the marine court may entertain these supplementary proceedings, unless deprived of jurisdiction by the effect of filing a transcript of the judgment in the county clerk’s office.

The sixty-eighth section of the Code, which was made applicable to the marine court, provided that upon filing a transcript with the clerk of the county, the judgment shall be “ enforced in the same manner and be deemed a judgment of the court of common pleas.”

That section was also made applicable to justices’ and other inferior courts of cities, not of record.

The marine court at' that time was not a court of record except for certain purposes (Huff agt. Knapp, 5 N. Y. R., 65; Porter agt. Bronson, 29 How. Pr. R. 292), but by the [292]*292act of 1872 (Laws of 1872, chapter 629), it is declared to be a court of record for all purposes. That act also provided that the judgments of "the court, docketed with the county clerk, shall have the same effect as a lien, and be enforced in the same manner as a judgment of the court of common pleas. It will be seen that the words and be deemed a judgment of the court of common pleas ” are omitted, and the repealing clause of all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act, is an express repeal of the sixty-eighth section of the Code as respects the marine court. The act of 1874 is still broader. Section 12 provides that the judgment of the court may be docketed with the county clerk, and shall thereupon have the same effect as a lien, and be enforced in the same manner as any other judgment of said court,” thus changing it from “ the same manner as judgments of the cohrt of common ph as ” and leaving it with the marine court to execute its own judgment in all cases.

This change in the statute was not noticed in Matter of Lippman (decided January 13th, 1875), nor was it necessary that it should be as the judgment in that case had not-been docketed with the county clerk.

It is quite clear therefore, I think, that under the last statute the marine court is given power to execute its own judgments in the same manner that other courts of record may do; and whether docketed with the county clerk, or otherwise, an execution may issue from such court, and no longer need be issued, as is understood to have been the former practice, out of the court of common pleas.

The Code regulating proceedings supplementary to an execution has been held to apply to justices’ judgments which had been docketed in the county clerk’s office which covered the judgments of the marine court, which had been docketed in like manner, and the officer authorized to make the order was a judge of the court of common pleas.

When the section of the Code was enacted, and down to the act of 1874, the marine court judgments, after docket in [293]*293the county clerk’s office, were, in effect, judgments- of the common pleas, and the judges of that court had exclusive jurisdiction.

But as it was competent for the legislature to relieve the marine court from the operation of the sixty-eighth section of the Code and give it control over its judgments in respect to the manner of executing and enforcing them, it was equally competent to extend its jurisdiction to these supple•mentary proceedings.

This has been done and the marine court, under the act of 1874, is given the same power over its judgments, and the manner of executing them, as is possessed by other courts of record, and the only effect of docketing in the county clerk’s office is to make the judgment a lien on real property, as provided in section 282 of the Code, in respect to the judgments of other courts.

Another objection is that the court cannot'appoint a receiver until after the return of the execution unsatisfied.

The two hundred and ninety-fourth section allows the examination of a third person alleged to have property of the debtor before the return of the execution; and the authority to appoint a receiver is given by the two hundred and ninety-eighth section. The two hundred and ninety-ninth section provides that, if the person examined claims an interest in the property, adverse to the judgment debtor, such interest shall be recoverable only in an action against such person by the receiver. There are several decisions affecting this question.

In Kemp agt. Harding (4 How. Pr. Rep., 178), the appointment of a receiver was made under section 294, but without notice to the debtor, who appealed from the order, and the general term of the fifth judicial district held that, to author- ' ize the appointment of a receiver, in section 298 of the Code, the proceedings should be against the debtor to reach the property generally, and not under the two hundred' and ninety-fourth section, of third persons as to property of [294]*294the debtor in their hands, and that without such personal proceedings against the debtor, a receiver could not be appointed. That ease has been approved in Baker agt. Johnson (4 Abb. R., 437), where it was held that a receiver, appointed without an order for the examination of the judgment debtor, could have no authority to sue, and in Sherwood agt. Buffalo, &c., R. R. (12 How. Pr. R., 136), it is said the proceedings under section 294 is merely in aid’of the principal proceedings against the judgment debtor, and must be had in connection with it, and cannot be resorted - to independently of any proceeding against the debtor. Danore agt. Lee (16 Abb., 215) was also an appeal from the order, and it was held by the, general term of the common pleas that, until the return unsatisfied of an execution, a receiver can, in no case, be appointed.

In Andrews agt. Gleville Woolen Co. (11 Abb. [N. S.], 78), the court say: Section 294 does not authorize the appointment of a receiver, nor can a receiver be appointed of a particular debt or a particular article of the debtor’s property.

These are sufficient to show the current of decision setting strongly against the power to appoint a receiver, except upon an order for the examination of a judgment debtor,' and I think they are sufficiently uniform to serve as a safe guide in determining the objection to the plaintiff’s right to sue in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 How. Pr. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-orgler-nysuperctnyc-1875.