Remmey v. Gedney

57 How. Pr. 217, 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 28
CourtNew York Marine Court
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 How. Pr. 217 (Remmey v. Gedney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Marine Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remmey v. Gedney, 57 How. Pr. 217, 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 28 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

The district court in the city of New York is, by section 9 of the Code, designated as one of the several courts of the state of New York, and therefore forms part of the judicial system of the state, and the salary of the justices of said court, upon principles of public policy, can neither be attached, reached nor taken, either upon mesne or final process, nor under supplementary proceedings founded thereon or .taken in aid thereof, if the person in whose hands the fund is attempted to be attached or taken holds the money in his official capacity as county treasurer or comptroller in common with other money, to be applied by him towards the payment of judicial or other official salaries according to law. In other words, the public moneys specifically appropriated to the payment oF judicial and other official salaries cannot be diverted from their legitimate object while in the hands of the disbursing officer of the public. The supreme court of the United States declared against such diversion of the public moneys in the case of certain seamen of the frigate Constitution (See Buchanan agt. Alexander, 4 How. U. S. Reports, 30). That learned court, in delivering its opinion, said: “That if such appropriations may be diverted and defeated by state process or otherwise, the functions of the government may be suspended; that so long as money remains in the hands of the disbursing officer it is as much the money of the United States as if it had not been drawn from the treasury; that until paid over by the agent of the government to the person entitled to it, the fund cannot, in any legal sense, be considered a part of his effects, and that the purser (who was in that case the disbursing officer) was not the debtor of the seamen.” The court, in deciding further, observed: “A purser, it would seem, cannot, in this respect, be distinguished from any other disbursing agent of the government. If the creditors of these seamen may, by process of attachment, divert the public money from its legitimate and appropriate object, the same thing may be done as regards the pay of our officers and men of the army and of the navy, and, also, in every other case where the public funds may be placed in the hands of an agent for distribution. To state such a principle is to refute it. No government can sanction it. At all times it would be found embarrassing, and, under some circumstances, it might be fatal to the public service.”

The same principle was applied to the case of a school teacher by the Kentucky court of appeals (See Tracy agt. Hornbuckle, 8 Bush, 331; 12 Albany L. J., 391; and see opinion of McAdam J., in Dubernet agt. C lyde, filed May 16, 1876). If the plaintiff is allowed to take the salary appropriated by law to the defendant’s support for the month claimed herein, he, or any other judgment creditor may, with equal propriety, appropriate the same from month to month, during the defendant’s entire official term, until all of their judgments, with costs, have been fully satisfied. It is almost needless to say that such a diversion of the public moneys by judgment creditors might seriously embarrass the disbursing officers of [219]*219the government, and might, at the same time, interfere with the proper administration of its judicial system hy preventing the money specifically devoted hy the public to the support and maintenance of its chosen officer in a manner becoming the dignity of the office, from ever reaching the object contemplated. If this result can be successfully accomplished in this case, it can be done in every case in which a judicial officer who, either prior to his election or while in office, has been overtaken by financial misfortune and has judgment creditors clamoring for their demands. It is but fair to assume that judicial officers will pay their just obligations, if able, and that they, like other honest men overtaken by financial embarrassments, are unable to do so without the necessary means, and there is no legal reason why their creditors should either embarrass the government authorities by proceedings tending to divert the public moneys or hundíate the judicial officer by seeking to appropriate that which, by law, was designed for his proper support and maintenance. After the salary reaches the judicial officer, he is, like any other private citizen, liable to all the actions and proceedings contemplated by law, and is amenable to all the civil remedies provided for the collection of debts or the enforcement of just liabilities, but while the salary of the judicial officer is in the hands of the disbursing officer of the government, in his official capacity, in common with other money to be applied by him towards the payment of judicial and other official salaries according to law, the judgment creditor of the officer, either by supplementary proceedings or otherwise, cannot prevent such disbursing officer from properly discharging his trust by paying the salary to the officer for whom it was by law designed, much less can such creditor be allowed to divert the public moneys from the uses and purposes to and for which they were specifically appropriated by orders or proceedings tending to appropriate the same to himself in payment of judgments or otherwise, This is upon the pervading principle in all governments, that where private and public interests come in conflict, with proper exceptions, the former must yield. The court of appeals, in Bliss agt. Lawrence (58 N. Y., at pp. 445, 451), uses the following language in stating the same general principle: “The public service is protected by protecting those engaged in performing public duties; and this, not upon the ground of their private interest, but upon that of the necessity of securing the efficiency of the public service by seeing to it that the funds provided for its maintenance should be received by those who are to perform the work, at such periods as the law has appointed for their payment. To this extent, we think, the public policy of every country must go to secure the end in view.” The order in the present case was issued against Andrew H. Green, Esq., as comptroller of the city and comity of New York, under section 294 of the Code, and was designed to reach the defendant’s salary. Mr. Green, either individually or officially as comptroller, was in no legal sense the debtor of the defend[220]*220ant; he was not the defendant’s employer; he owed him no salary, nor had he any funds in his hands belonging to the defendant. The moneys appropriated to the payment of judicial salaries belong to the public until actually paid over to the defendant, when they will become for the first time identified as his property. The possession by the comptroller of the warrant in the defendant’s favor does not alter this conclusion, because the mere drawing of the check does not amount even to an equitable assignment of the fund until the warrant is actually delivered, so that the application for an order directing the comptroller to pay over the moneys claimed to have been discovered upon the defendant’s examination is without warrant inlaw, and pannot be granted.

The supreme court of Tennessee, in Bank of Tennessee agt. Dibrell (3 Sneed’s Reports, 379), held that “the relations of debtor and creditor, in the sense of the attachment and garnishee laws, does not exist between the state and its employees ; the funds set apart for that purpose belong to the state and not to him who renders such service, until they pass out of the treasury and the hands of disbursing agents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 How. Pr. 217, 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remmey-v-gedney-nymarct-1876.