In Re the Application for the Removal of Humfreville

47 N.E. 1086, 154 N.Y. 115, 8 E.H. Smith 115, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 547
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 47 N.E. 1086 (In Re the Application for the Removal of Humfreville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Application for the Removal of Humfreville, 47 N.E. 1086, 154 N.Y. 115, 8 E.H. Smith 115, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 547 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The only question involved in this appeal is the power of the Surrogate’s Court to enforce a decree for the payment of costs by imprisonment. It appears that upon an application to remove the appellant, J. Lee Humfreville, from the office of executor and testamentary trustee under the will of Mary J. Havemeyer, deceased, the surrogate of Yew York, on the 5th day of May, 1896, entered a decree revoking the letters testamentary issued to the appellant, as executor and trustee, and removing him from office. The decree further directed that the appellant pay to the petitioners in the proceeding, or to their attorneys, the sum of $625.72 costs.

This decree was duly served upon the appellant, but the costs were not paid. On the 30th of April, 1897, another order was entered in the Surrogate’s Court, upon a hearing of all parties interested, adjudging the appellant to be guilty of contempt in disobeying the order referred to, which was cal *118 culated to and actually did defeat, impair, impede and prejudice the rights and remedies of said petitioners, to their actual loss or damage, in the sum of $625.72. It imposed a fine upon the appellant as a punishment for this contempt to the amount of the costs so awarded and directed that he be committed by the sheriff of the city and county of New York to the county jail of said county, to be there detained in close custody until he pay said sum, or be discharged according to law, and that a warrant issue to execute the order. Upon an appeal to the Appellate Division the order of the surrogate was affirmed, and it is this order which is now before us for review.

The decision of the question here involved requires the construction of two sections of the Code of Civil Procedure, which would appear, at first view, to be in conflict with each other. The various sections and provisions of the Code are to be read and construed as one complete act, and all of its provisions should be made to harmonize with each other as far as possible. By section 15 it is enacted that “ a person shall not be arrested or imprisoned, for the non-payment of costs, awarded otherwise than by a final judgment, or a final order, made in a special proceeding instituted by state writ, except where an attorney, counselor, or other officer' of the court, is ordered to pay costs for misconduct as such, or a witness is ordered to pay costs on an attachment for non-attendance.” It cannot be denied that by this section imprisonment for the non-payment of costs is plainly and absolutely prohibited, except in the cases therein particularly specified; and it is not claimed that the case at bar comes within any of these exceptions, and obviously it does not. What is there forbidden in clear and comprehensive terms cannot be held to be permitted by some subsequent section or provision, unless such permission is expressed in language clear and certain. The general rule to be observed from the provisions of this section is that judgments or decrees for the payment of costs cannot be enforced by imprisonment.

But it is said that, notwithstanding' the prohibition of this section against the enforcement of the payment of costs by *119 imprisonment, the order appealed from is justified by the provisions of section 2555. That section provides that, in certain cases, the decree of the Surrogate’s Court directing the payment of money, or requiring the performance of any other act, may be enforced by serving a certified copy thereof upon the party against whom it is rendered, or the officer or person who is required thereby, or by law, to obey it; and if he refuses or willfully neglects to obey it, by punishing him for a contempt of court. The cases in which this remedy may be pursued are specified in the section, and are: (1) Where the decree cannot be enforced by execution ; (2) where part of it cannot be enforced by execution, in which case the part or parts which cannot be so enforced may be enforced as prescribed in this section; (3) where an execution has been issued to the sheriff of the surrogate’s county and returned by him wholly or partly unsatisfied; (4) where the delinquent is an executor, administrator, guardian or testamentary trustee, and the decree relates to the fund or estate, in which case the decree may be enforced by proceedings for contempt, after the return of the execution, or without issuing an execution, in the discretion of the surrogate. Mow, this section obviously does specify certain cases in which a surrogate’s decree may be enforced by imprisonment; but it is important to observe that nothing in the section necessarily or specifically relates to a decree for the payment of costs, pure and simple.- Section 2554 provides that a decree directing the payment of a sum of money into court, or to one or more parties, may be enforced by an execution against the property of the party directed to make payment. For the purpose of determining the effect of the different provisions of this Code, with respect to each other, they are to be deemed to have been enacted simultaneously. (Sec. 3355.) Treating the sections referred to as having been enacted on the same day and in the same bill, and reading them all together, the question here is, what is their legal effect and real meaning ? Section 15 relates to costs, and to costs alone, and prohibits imprisonment for their collection. Section 2555 relates to decrees of Surrogates’ *120 Courts directing the payment of money or the performance of any other act, and is not at all in conflict with section 15. The two provisions can have full force and effect and stand together. If the decree in the Surrogate’s Court simply directs the payment of costs and nothing else, imprisonment cannot follow, under the provisions of section 15. There is nothing in section 2555 inconsistent with this. That section manifestly refers to decrees for the payment of money adjudged against a party other than mere costs. It authorizes imprisonment for the enforcement of such decree, and it may very well be that when, in such a decree for the payment of money, general costs are also included as an incident of the judgment, that then the whole decree may be enforced by proceedings for contempt. But that is not the case before us. The money which the appellant was directed by the order to pay was costs, and nothing else, and the collection of such costs cannot be enforced by imprisonment without violating the general prohibition of section 15. Since there is nothing in section 2555 specifically authorizing the enforcement of a judgment or decree for costs by imprisonment, and since imprisonment in such cases is absolutely forbidden by section 15, the two sections, when read together and construed together, relieve the appellant in this case from liability to imprisonment.

There is another view of the case that tends to strengthen this conclusion. There are numerous proceedings authorized by statute in the Surrogates’ Courts touching the administration of estates of deceased persons, such as the removal of testamentary trustees, their accounting, and even the accounting of executors generally, as to which the Supreme Court has concurrent jurisdiction. It is not claimed that in any of these cases a decree for costs, when made in the Supreme Court, could be enforced by imprisonment.

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47 N.E. 1086, 154 N.Y. 115, 8 E.H. Smith 115, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-for-the-removal-of-humfreville-ny-1897.