Wehle v. . Conner

83 N.Y. 231, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 476
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 83 N.Y. 231 (Wehle v. . Conner) 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
Wehle v. . Conner, 83 N.Y. 231, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 476 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Finch, J.

This case is before us for the third time. On the first appeal we held that the attachments levied upon the plaintiff’s judgments were not a defense to the action commenced against the sheriff for not returning the execution within the sixty days. (63 N. Y. 258.) On the second appeal we further decided that the attachments might be given in evidence in mitigation of damages, and while they remained as existing and valid process, the plaintiff could only recover nominal damages. (69 N. Y. 546.) The case has been tried and decided in accordance with that conclusion, and the judgment must be affirmed unless the facts have been materially changed, or some erroneous ruling upon the admission or rejection of evidence has occurred. We have only to consider the case in these respects.

The first ground of difference suggested is that it now appears that the sheriff did not make a valid levy under the execution, whereas our last decision was founded upon proof that he made such levy. There are several answers to this suggestion. The sheriff claims to have made a levy. The facts appear to be that he entered the store of the defendants in the execution, announced to them that he levied upon the stock of goods there present, indorsed a memorandum of the levy upon his execution, and left the goods in charge of Butler, one of the defendants. There was enough in this to make the sheriff liable as a trespasser, if not protected by his process, and quite enough to make him responsible to the parties interested for the value of his levy. (Connah v. Hale, 23 Wend. 462; Camp v. Chamberlain, 5 Den. 198; Barker v. Binninger, 14 N. Y. 270.) It appears further that his action was, at least, sufficient to induce the debtors in the execution to deposit for the sheriff’s indemnity an amount of money sufficient for his protection, so that practically he holds the money instead of *236 the goods. This statement of the facts deprives of all its force the argument founded on the want of a levy, that if he had done his duty the plaintiff would have had something substantial wherewith to pay or discharge the attachments. The necessary amount is provided; it is within the reach of the sheriff, and it came as the result of his levy. But were it' otherwise it would not affect the ground of our previous decision or warrant a contrary conclusion. What we then held was that while the attachments remained in force and operative upon the plaintiff’s judgment, they were insuperable barriers to her right to receive any thing. She suffers no damages so long as- she has no right to receive the fruits of the judgment. It is wholly immaterial whether the sheriff is liable by reason of not having returned the execution, because of a neglect to levy, or on account of the actual collection and. receipt of the money. In either event it is only the party entitled to receive the fund who has suffered the actual damage. The sheriff is indeed liable to somebody on one or more of the grounds stated; but that person is not as yet the plaintiff. The reason why the' sheriff does not pay is immaterial so long as she is not entitled to receive the pay. She is not harmed by the withholding from any cause of an amount which she has no right to receive. Any- other rule ’would nullify the force and effect of the attachments, and enable her, without vacating process apparently valid, to circumvent it. Our ruling, therefore, went not at all upon the particular form or occasion of the sheriff’s liability, but without reference to that and altogether upon the ground that only nominal damages could be claimed by one not entitled as yet to receive any thing from the sheriff.

It is next said to have been proven that upon this same levy $100 had been paid to the sheriff by the attorneys of the judgment debtors which were not levied on under the attachment. This argument admits, the levy by the sheriff under his execution, but denies, as to the amount in question, the levy by virtue of the attachments. It does not appear whether this sum was paid before or after they were issued; but that -is not material. *237 If after, the levy upon the judgment held it. If before, and if it be regarded as the property of the plaintiff, disregarding the sheriff’s claim that he received it for his fees, still- it was held by the attachment issued to the sheriff commanding him to “ attach and safely keep the property of the plaintiff.” Ho formal levy or notice was needed where the property was already in his hands. The attachment fastened it there,' and left the plaintiff with no right to receive it. In the end it is of course to be accounted for to the person or persons properly entitled, but that result cannot be reached until the attachment suits are terminated. We do not forget the point elaborately and ably argued that the money actually collected and in the sheriff’s hands could not be attached. The cases in Massachusetts (Wilder v. Bailey, 3 Mass. 289; Pollard v. Ross, 5 id. 319) are ably argued and have been approved in many of the States. But the rule has not been adopted in this State ; was questioned in Dunlop v. Patterson Fire. Ins. Co. (74 N. Y. 145), and the right to attach a fund in the custody of an officer of the court sustained; and if adopted by us would graft upon the enactment of the legislature an exception which that body has not seen fit to make. (Code, § 231.) Indeed the line of argument adopted in the cases referred to is better adapted to affect the judgment of those who make the laws than that of those whose duty ends with their interpretation. The same considerations equally affect the further contention that judgment debts are not liable to attachment. The counsel concedes that they are fairly embraced within the language of the Code (§ 235), but invokes an interpretation founded upon public policy. It would be a precedent dangerous and unjustifiable if we should assume the right to warp a plain and unambiguous statute to suit our notions of public policy.

A question is raised as to two of the judgments which .were rendered for costs on appeals. It is insisted that they were not affected by the attachments, because of the precedence of the attorney’s lien. But that question is not here. Until such a lien is asserted by the party entitled to-it the judgments are the property of the plaintiff. The sheriff could not treat them *238 otherwise, nor can the court. Without notice of the claim the lien cannot be enforced. (Martin v. Hawks, 15 Johns. 406; Ackerman v. Ackerman, 14 Abb. 234; Crocker on Sheriffs, § 283.) There was no offer to prove such notice, nor any attempt to enforce the lien by the party entitled. The attorney Only could do it, for with him alone was the right.

The plaintiff offered to prove that “ there was a conspiracy between the three attachment creditors and the judgment debtors and the sheriff, by which these attachments should be issued for the purpose of preventing the collection of plaintiff’s judgments. ” The offer was excluded, and we think properly. The learned counsel for the plaintiff argues in support of his offer as if it was an effort to prove the attachments fraudulent and void. No such suggestion was made.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.Y. 231, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehle-v-conner-ny-1880.