Second National Bank of Oswego v. Dunn

63 How. Pr. 434
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 How. Pr. 434 (Second National Bank of Oswego v. Dunn) 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
Second National Bank of Oswego v. Dunn, 63 How. Pr. 434 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This unusual proceeding is based upon section 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that a court of record has power to punish, by fine and imprisonment, or either, a neglect or violation of duty, or other misconduct, by which a right or remedy of a party to a civil action or special proceeding, pending in a court, may be defeated, impaired, impeded or prejudiced in either of certain enumerated cases, and among them that of a sheriff for misbehavior in his office or trust, willful neglect or violation of duty therein, or disobedience to a lawful mandate of the court.

[436]*436. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the sheriff has rendered himself liable to punishment under these provisions, by what he has done or failed to do, with an execution in its favor issued against the property of the defendant on the 14th of January,. 1882, It appears that on the 7th of January, 1882, the defendant Mr. Dunn made a general assignment for the benefit of his. creditors to John Dorsey, Jr., his bookkeeper and clerk, who at once took possession of the assigned property, and.arnong the rest of a, malt house in Oswego, containing a quantity of malt in. bulk, supposed to be about 18,000 bushels. Two days later, on the ninth, replevin process in favor of the First National Bank against said Dunn and Dorsey, was placed in.the sheriffs hands requiring him to replevy 10,000 bushels of said malt. The sheriff seized the malt under this process, and after keeping it in his possession for the time and in the manner required by law, on the thirteenth went to the president of the First National Bank, at its banking rooms, and told him that he had come to deliver the malt called for by the requisition in replevin, and that he did deliver it. The president accepted such delivery, but told the sheriff that he should like" to have him separate the 10,000 bushels and deliver it at a designated place. All this occurred prior to the recovery of the judgment in this action, and prior even to the giving of the note on which such judgment was rendered, although the debt for which the note was given had existed for more than a month. On the thirteenth Mr. Dunn gave plaintiff a note, by its terms due at once, and on the same day, having been sued thereon, served an offer to compromise under the pode, upon which at half-past five p. m. judgment was rendered against him for $15,415.23, besides costs. An execution was forthwith issued on this judgment to the coroner, but it was soon withdrawn, and on.the fourteenth, one was issued to the sheriff who, at the request of the.plaintiff, at onceJevied on, the malt in question and other property. On the siyte.enfh.the plaintiff served a notice on the sheriff that by virtue of its judgment, execu[437]*437tion and levy, it claimed title and right to possession of all the malt. On the seventeenth the First National Bank indemnified the sheriff against such claim pursuant to section 1709 of the Code. In the meantime the sheriff, who had been notified by Hr. Dorsey to remove the malt as he wanted the room, had commenced moving the same to the malt-house of Lyon & Hott, distant about 100 rods; and on the seventeenth, when the stay of proceedings was granted herein on the motion of the plaintiff, about 5,500 bushels had been removed. A deputy was placed in charge of the malt as fast as it was stored, and no part has yet left the possession of the sheriff. The plaintiff also indemnified the sheriff, but he claims that the penalty of the bond is not large enough, and that one of the sureties, being an attorney, is disqualified under Buie 5 of this court.

Thus the sheriff found himself in the possession of two mandates of the court, apparently, but not really, in conflict.

By the mandate in replevin he was commanded, after the expiration of three days and the failure of the defendants therein to except to the sureties or reclaim the chattels, having been indemnified against the claim of title made by the Second National Bank, to deliver the malt to the First National Bank (Code of C. P., secs. 1690 to 1712).

By the mandate in the form of an execution he was commanded, having been indemnified by the Second National Bank against any claim of title or right to possession by a third party, to detain the malt as belonging to the judgment debtor and sell it in satisfaction of plaintiff’s judgment (Code, sec. 1419).

■ For any failure to act strictly according to law he and his official -sureties are liable in damages to the party injured, and in addition to that liability, it is now sought to punish him for contempt because it is claimed that he did not correctly decide certain grave questions of law that counsel have argued so elaborately and in relation to which they differ so widely.

[438]*438I. It is provided by section 1709 of the Code that at any time before a chattel, which has been replevied, is actually delivered to either party, a third person may present his claim to possession, provided such claim was in existence at the time when the chattel was replevied.

This means a completed delivery, so that nothing further remains to be done. What transpired at the interview between the sheriff and the president of the First National Bank, on the thirteenth, did not constitute such a delivery, as the malt was in bulk, and the 10,000 bushels was not separated from the mass. It was a formal, but not that manual or physical delivery contemplated by the statute. Hence the notice of claim served on the sixteenth by the Second National Bank,, by virtue of its execution and levy, was in time.

II. The plaintiffs claim, however, although presented before the actual delivery of the malt to the First National Bank, was not in existence at the time when the malt was replevied. This claim is not by virtue, simply, of the debt of the Second National Bank against John Dunn, which constituted no lien and gave no right of possession, but by virtue of the judgment rendered on that debt, the execution issued on the judgment and the levy made under the execution, which ordinarily would constitute a lien and give- a right to possession. The claim must exist at the time the property is replevied (Sec. 1709). The property is replevied by the sheriff’s taking it into his possession (Sec. 1700). But when the sheriff took this malt into his possession the Second National Bank had no lien, and nothing under which it could claim a lien. It had no judgment. It had not commenced an action. Even the note on which it afterwards recovered judgment was not in existence.

III. It was the duty of the sheriff, under the mandate in replevin, to deliver the malt to the First National Bank after the expiration of the time provided by law. Was that duty liable to be suspended by the intervention of the right of a third party, even if its claim or lien was not in existence at [439]*439the time the property was replevied, so as to be asserted under section 1709 2 If, for instance, an execution against the First National Bank had been issued to the sheriff before actual delivery of the malt by him, would it have suspended his obligation to deliver to the bank until he had satisfied the execution against it 2 Did the issuing of the execution in this action, in favor of the Second National Bank, against the property of John Dunn, with tender of indemnity under section 1419, suspend the obligation of the sheriff to deliver the malt to the First National Bank until that execution should be satisfied 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 How. Pr. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/second-national-bank-of-oswego-v-dunn-nysupct-1882.