People ex rel. Jennys v. Brennan

6 Thomp. & Cook 120, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 666
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Thomp. & Cook 120 (People ex rel. Jennys v. Brennan) 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
People ex rel. Jennys v. Brennan, 6 Thomp. & Cook 120, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 666 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The respondent’s counsel insists that this court is concluded by the order made on the 10th of May, 1872, directing the appellant, the sheriff, to pay her the money he had previously collected on the execution in her favor, from questioning the propriety of that discretion. But that is clearly a misapprehension of the condition of the case. For the order which directed the attachment to be issued so far modified the order making that direction, as to allow the parties to read upon the hearing which should be afterward had, the papers used by the respective parties on the hearing of a preceding order to show cause, and from the circumstance that the proceedings in the United States District Court were produced and proved on the part of the sheriff, it may be inferred that they were within the scope of the modification so made. This conclusion is further warranted by the fact that no objection that they were not within it seems to have been taken by the relator to that course of proceedings, and the opinion of the learned justice by whose direction the order for the attachment was entered, very decidedly confirms that view of the liberty secured by means of it. From that it appears that the intention existed to allow the sheriff to show that the relator had consented to the reference made of the controversy concerning the title to the money collected under the [123]*123execution by the United States District Court, by way of an answer to the proceedings instituted to punish him for disobeying the order directing him to pay the money to her; and on the final hearing of that proceeding that fact, as well as the hearing and final order following it, were shown for the purpose of protecting him from the order afterward made imposing a find upon him for his disobedience of the order directing the payment to the relator. These facts were entirely proper to be shown on the part of the sheriff for another reason ; for although the reference in the United States District Court was ordered before the order was made directing him to pay the money to the relator, the hearing itself was chiefly if not entirely afterward, and the final order under which the money was paid to the assignee was not made until the 1st day of March, 1873. The effect of the hearing and of the order made upon its determination could not be considered, and were not involved in the order of the 10th of May, 1872, directing payment to the relator, and unless the sheriff éould prove them for his protection in the proceedings instituted by the attachment, he would have been completely deprived of all benefit from them. They were entirely proper for the consideration of the court in the proceedings taken to punish the sheriff for disobeying the order of the 10th of May, 1872, under the provisions contained in the order directing the attachment, as well as from the circumstances that the proceedings in the District Court of the United States were not concluded until long after the order, which was disobeyed, was made. At that time it could not be known whether the proceeding pending in the District Court would result in a direction adverse to the relator’s claim, and it was not possible for the court to consider or adjudge the effect of such a direction.

The first opportunity for presenting and considering the effect oí the determination which was made, was in the proceedings taken by the attachment, and in them it was fully shown, together with what preceded and followed it in the United States District Court. But notwithstanding the adjudication of that court, that the money in controversy should be paid by the sheriff to the assignee in bankruptcy, and the actual payment following it, the special term of this court held in the proceedings instituted by the attachment that the payment was unlawful, and that the sheriff must pay the money again to the relator. The effect of the decision is that the proceedings in the United States District Court, and pay[124]*124ment under and pursuant to them, constituted no proper answer to the relator’s demand for the same money. Whether that conclusion was correct or not, is the point now remaining to be considered in the disposition of the present appeal. ’

Under the bankrupt law, there can be no doubt but that the proper mode of determining the conflicting claims made for the money collected upon the execution, was by a bill in equity either by the assignee or the sheriff. That point has been definitely settled by the decisions made in Smith v. Mason, 14 Wall. 419, and Marshall v. Knox, 16 id. 551. But in both those cases the proceedings by petition were not only opposed by the parties proceeded against, but they were reviewed in the manner which the bankrupt law provided for that purpose. The present case is distinguishable from them in both respects. For the relator first consented to the reference of the claims under the petition of the assignee, and after a determination against her, denies its effect in a collateral proceeding. The proofs produced upon the hearing of the proceedings under the attachment show that her counsel consented to the reference in order to avoid the necessity of the more formal action by bill of complaint, and that consent was in no manner attempted to be withdrawn until it had been acted upon, and the reference ordered. After that, and aftef the objection was made before the register, that the proceeding should have been by bill, the relator proceeded with the hearing, and gave, as well as contested, evidence, which was pertinent to the settlement of the controversy embodied in the order. The objection was renewed in the brief presented to the United States court on the final hearing, but in the disposition then made of the case, it must have been disregarded.

That the United States District Court had jurisdiction over the controversy 'existing between the relator and the assignee is settled by the authorities already cited. And if her consent was sufficient to subject her to that jurisdiction by the proceedings commenced by the petition, then the objection afterward made did not have the effect of depriving the court of the authority which she had voluntarily given it over her person.

It had the power of subjecting her to its jurisdiction for the settlement of the dispute existing between her and its officer. But not by means of the summary proceeding taken by him, unless she elected to consent to it. But as she did consent, and the-reference to take the proof was made upon that basis; by that act she sur[125]*125rendered herself to the jurisdiction of that court for the purposes comprehended in the petition. She was irregularly brought before it but waived the irregularity by the assent to the proceedings which her counsel gave in her behalf. That gave it jurisdiction over her person, and as the subject-matter was within its lawful authority, that was sufficient to enable the District Court to proceed with the hearing and decision of the dispute concerning the money in the sheriff’s hands. After jurisdiction was obtained in this manner over the relator, the court had the right to retain it until all the purposes of the proceeding were fully attained, Pelts v. Davidson, 37 N. Y. 235, 243; and even though it might have been an irregular proceeding, it was still binding and effectual as long as it was not reversed nor set aside.

This was held of a similar proceeding in the case of People v. Norton, 9 N. Y. 176, where a trustee had been removed by petition instead of by bill of complaint.

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Related

Smith v. Mason
81 U.S. 419 (Supreme Court, 1871)
Marshall v. Knox
83 U.S. 551 (Supreme Court, 1873)
Dwight v. . St. John
25 N.Y. 203 (New York Court of Appeals, 1862)
Clapp v. . Graves
26 N.Y. 418 (New York Court of Appeals, 1863)
The People v. . Norton
9 N.Y. 176 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)
Pitt v. . Davison
37 N.Y. 235 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)
Conkling v. . King
10 N.Y. 440 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)
Fisher v. . Hepburn
48 N.Y. 41 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
Ex parte Squires v. Broome C .P.
10 Wend. 600 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)
Viburt v. Frost
3 Abb. Pr. 119 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1856)
Buffalo & State Line Railroad v. Board of Supervisors
48 N.Y. 93 (Commission of Appeals, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Thomp. & Cook 120, 10 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-jennys-v-brennan-nysupct-1875.