In re Hess

1 N.Y.S. 811, 55 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 586, 16 N.Y. St. Rep. 255, 48 Hun 586, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1589
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 N.Y.S. 811 (In re Hess) 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
In re Hess, 1 N.Y.S. 811, 55 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 586, 16 N.Y. St. Rep. 255, 48 Hun 586, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1589 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The writ of certiorari was not issued under the authority of title 2, art. 3, c. 16, Code Civil Proc. But it was issued under article 3, tit. 2, c. 16, Code, whose functions and office are the same as the writ of habeas corpus. And it has the sanction chiefly of section 2041 of the Code, as well as of other sections in the same article, containing references to these writs. Each is equally effectual where the objection exists that there is no legal cause for the imprisonment of the petitioner. The motion to dismiss the writ on the ground that it was issued without legal authority is therefore without foundation, and the legality of the petitioner’s detention must be inquired into. He was the assignee in a general assignment made by Alice Hazard for the benefit of her creditors. That assignment was set aside as fraudulent in two actions brought, by judgment creditors of the assignor, charging that to have been the nature of the assignment; and, under the decision made, the assignee was required to account for the assigned estate before a referee, who was nominated to take the account, and to deliver and pay over the property remaining in his hands to the receiver appointed in this action. The accounting was had before the referee, who reported a sum of money to be due from the assignee on account of the property received by him under the assignment. This report, upon the hearing of exceptions filed by the assignee, was confirmed on the 25th of January, 1888, and in the order it was adjudged that Walter P. Hess forthwith pay to Howland E. Beers, the receiver named and appointed in the above-entitled action, the sum of $728.92, being [812]*812$638 principal and $90.92 interest thereon, mentioned in said report, and that he also forthwith pay to said receiver the fees of the referee and stenographer, and such other disbursements as have been made or necessarily incurred in said accounting, to be taxed by the clerk on notice, and also the interest on the sum awarded by said report according to section 1235 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and take the receipt of said receiver therefor. The section in this manner referred to provided only for the addition of interest, and it is not important to consider it to determine the legality of the proceeding. The assignee failed, upon demand, to pay over the money, and he was then required to show cause why he should not be punished for disobedience of the order already mentioned, and on the hearing which afterwards followed a further order was made reciting the direction contained in the order of January, 1888, and adjudging the petitioner to be in contempt, and imposing a fine upon him, amounting to the sum of $1,111.53, and then directing the sheriff of the county of Kings, or of the county of New York, to take the body of the petitioner, and commit him to the common jail of the county, and keep him detained therein until he should pay to the receiver this sum of money, together with $10 costs of the application and the fees of the sheriff.

These orders seem to have been made upon the conclusion that the case made out was within section 2268 of the Code. That section has directed that a warrant may be issued to commit an offender to prison who neglects or refuses to obey an order of the court requiring the payment of costs, or of a specified sum of money, after the court shall become satisfied that a personal demand has been made therefor, and that payment has been refused or neglected. But the broad language of this section has not been left unqualified by other provisions of the Code. It has, on the contrary, been provided by sub. 3, § 14, Code, as it was under the preceding statutes, that a party to an action or special proceeding shall only be punished byway of fine and imprisonment for the non-payment of a sum of money when an execution cannot be awarded for the collection of that sum; and this has been further declared by § 1241 of the Code, directing that where a judgment cannot be enforced by execution, as that has been prescribed in the preceding section, there the party refusing and neglecting to obey its mandate may be punished for a contempt of the court, and its observance enforced in that manner. The order or judgment directing the payment of this money was being capable of being enforced by execution, for, by section 1240 of the Code, a judgment for a sum of money in favor of either party, or which directs the payment of a sum of money, may be enforced by an execution. These enactments are so broad as to include the class of cases where a sum of money has been recovered by one party against another, or has been directed to be paid by the judgment, and consequently that class of cases is not within the general language of section 2268 of the Code already mentioned. But after a right has accrued to recover the money either a final order or judgment must be entered, and an execution issued for the collection of the amount.

The order in this case was of this description. It did not direct the payment by the petitioner of any specific money he might have in his hands or under his control, but it was for the payment of money generally. It was for an ascertained and specific sum as distinguished from a specific or particular fund required or directed to be paid over, and where that is the order the remedy of the party entitled to the money against the person legally bound for its payment is a judgment and execution It may issue against his property solely, or in a case not arising upon contract against his person if the amount cannot be collected from his estate. The one or the other of these remedies is that which the law has prescribed as the means to be used by the creditor for the collection of the amount required to be paid. This question was considered very fully in Meyers v. Becher, 29 Hun, 567. In that case a very similar order was made directing the payment of money by an assignee after the [813]*813assignment had been set aside as fraudulent. The assignee failed to pay the money, and after the usual proceedings taken against him for that failure a precept was directed to be issued to commit him to the county jail until he paid the amount named. That was held to be unauthorized and unlawful, and upon appeal to the court of appeals this view was sanctioned and affirmed in 92 N. Y. 486. In the consideration of that case it was held that the legal course of proceeding required the entry of a judgment and the issuing of an execution for the collection of the indebtedness, and that the requirements of the law on this subject could not be evaded by resorting to an order committing the assignee to prison for his failure to comply with the direction of the order. This right of imprisonment by way of proceedings for contempt was fully considered in Re Watson, 69 N. Y. 536. There the party was imprisoned by a precept of the surrogate for a failure to comply with an order directing generally the payment of a sum of money; and the subject of the right to imprison for not paying was quite fully examined in the opinion of the court, and it was there said that “ we have been referred to no case, and I have not found any since the Revised Statutes, in which disobedience of a decree or order merely directing the payment of money by an executor, trustee, or other party, has been adjudged to be a contempt for which a fine could be imposed and the party committed as for a criminal contempt to close custody.” Id. 544. And the same construction of the statutory provisions contained in the Code, which, in their essential features, are like those contained in the preceding statute, was adopted and followed in Baker v. Baker, 23 Hun, 356, Gray v. Cook, 24 How. Pr.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y.S. 811, 55 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 586, 16 N.Y. St. Rep. 255, 48 Hun 586, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hess-nysupct-1888.