Meyers v. Becker

36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 567
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 567 (Meyers v. Becker) 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
Meyers v. Becker, 36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 567 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Barker, J.:

The judgment entered upon the report of the referee was not final, although it did determine all the most disputed questions at issue between the parties to the record.

The real purpose of the suit was to set aside the assignment made by the judgment debtors, and to reach the property and assets in the hands of their assignee, and to appropriate the same to the payment of the judgment which the plaintiff had procured against the assignors.

The value of the assets which came to the hands of the assignee was fixed and determined by the interlocutory judgment, and the only questions which remained to be investigated and determined were the allowances which 'he was entitled to have deducted from the gross sum which he had received.

The order entered upon the report of the referee, to whom it was referred, to take and state the account of the assignee, did dispose of all the remaining questions necessary to be determined and inserted in the final judgment.

After the entry of this order nothing remained to be litigated in the action. Upon the payment of the sums therein directed, nothing more could be demanded of Beckwith. Upon the entry of this order in Onondaga county clerk’s office, where the interlocutory judgment was filed', as between the parties to the record, it was, in substance and effect, a final judgment, although there was [571]*571not an enrollment as required by tbe course and practice of tbe court. Without any further order from the court, the clerk, at the request of the plaintiff’s attorney, or without it, could have attached to the interlocutory judgment all the subsequent orders, which would have been an enrollment of the decree, such as is usually and customarily made in such cases.

The practice pursued in this case seems to be in substantial compliance with the provisions of sections 1212 to 1223, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure. The provisions of these sections are similar in effect to the rules and practice of the old Court of Chancery. Mr. Barbour, in his'work on Practice, says: “A decree does not, strictly speaking, become a record of the court until it has been enrolled ; and although the court itself, after it has been duly settled and entered, treats it as a foundation for ulterior proceedings, it is not considered of a sufficiently permanent nature to entitle it, in other courts, to the same attention that is paid by one court of record to the records of other courts of the same nature.” (1 Barb. Oh. Pr. [2d. ed.], 341.)

Since the adoption of the Code, final judgments in suits in equity may be docketed and enforced in the same manner as actions at law, and many of the provisions of the Revised Statutes, relating to the enforcement of decrees in equity, are superseded and have become inoperative.

In Geery v. Geery (63 N. Y., 252), it was held that where money judgments are rendered in equitable actions, such as actions for the foreclosure of liens, for the partition of real estate, for specific performance, and for aoaoimtmg, such judgments are required to be entered, docketed and enforced in all respects like judgments rendered in actions at law. In the same case it was further held that whei’e the judgment required money to be paid to a receiver, who was not a party to the suit, the court could order the judgment for the sum directed to be paid, to be docketed in his favor and enforced by execution.

In Miller v. Miller (7 Hun, 208) it was also held that all judgments for the payment of moneys in actions of an equitable nature could be enforced by execution.

There is no doubt but what Beckwith may be imprisoned for nonpayment of the moneys which he was directed to pay over to the [572]*572receiver, in view of the nature and character of the debt established against him, but, by the provisions of the Code, an execution against'his property must, in the first instance, be issued and returned unsatisfied.

The provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to the enforcement of decrees in equity, being superseded by the Code, are not a justification for issuing a body execution in the first instance. Under these statutes the court could enforce performance of any decree by execution against the body of the party against whom the decree was entered, or by execution against his goods and chattels. (2 R. S., 183, § 10é.) The party entitled to the process could, at his option, in the first instance, issue an execution against the body of the party directed to perform the decree. The Matter of Watson v. Nelson (69 N. Y., 536) is not an authority for holding that these provisions of the Revised Statutes are now in force and can be resorted to for the enforcement of judgments in equity actions. That ease pertained to the mode and manner of enforcing decrees for the payment of moneys entered in a Surrogate’s court, and it was held that that court had the same powers as formerly existed in the Court of Chancery, and these provisions of the statute were in force so far as to compel a resort to the same, to enforce the orders and decrees of a Surrogate’s Court.

If, however, we are mistaken in the views which we have presented, that the order confirming the referee’s report and fixing the sum which Beckwith was required to pay to the receiver was not in effect a final judgment, so far as the parties to that suit were concerned, we are still of the opinion that the precept which was issued thereon was wholly unauthorized, for the reason that the order was not interlocutory in any proper sense of the term, but was a determination of the court, in the form of a decretal order, upon which interested parties could take stejis for the entry of final judgment, and was intended for that purpose and none other.

The chief object and purpose of the action was to reach the moneys in the hands of the assignee derived from the assignment; and this order determines the amount and directed him to pay the same over to an officer of the court. All the other issues and questions had been determined against the parties to the assignment and [573]*573were embraced in tbe interlocutory decree, and this was the sole and single inquiry remaining for determination.

Upon this order and the interlocutory judgment final judgment could have been entered without any .further directions from the court. Interlocutory orders are made to secure some end and purpose necessary and essential to the progress of the suit, a,nd generally collateral to the issues'formed by the pleadings and not connected with the final judgment. Every direction of a court made in an action is an order, unless it is contained in a judgment. (Code of Civil Pro., § 767.) This corresponds in all respects with section 100 of the preceding Code. The distinction between an order and a judgment seems to be this, that an order is a decision of a motion and a judgment is a decision of a trial. Where an order is entered sustaining or overruling a demurrer to an, entire pleading, without any leave to amend, it is substantially a judgment for the reason that the successful party is entitled to judgment thereon, and it is a final determination of the rights of the parties. Hoffman v. Barry, 2 Hun, 52.) These views are in harmony with section 1200 of the Code of Civil Procedure defining a judgment to be either interlocutory- or a final determination of the. rights of the parties.

The plaintiff relies upon the provisions of section 4, chapter 8, part 3, title 13 of the Revised Statutes (2 R.

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Related

Matter of Watson v. . Nelson
69 N.Y. 536 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Geery v. . Geery
63 N.Y. 252 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Van Wezel v. Van Wezel
3 Paige Ch. 38 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-becker-nysupct-1883.