103 N.Y. 502 | NY | 1886
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *504 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *506 The main question in this case is whether an order, made by a court of competent jurisdiction, staying the sheriff from interference, under an execution with the property of judgment debtor suspends, during its continuance, the running of the statutory term of sixty days given to the sheriff for executing the process.
The execution in question was issued under section 290 of the Code of Procedure, which provided that an "execution shall *508 be returnable within sixty days after its receipt by the officer to the clerk with whom the record of judgment is filed." This was substantially a re-enactment of section 24, chapter 386, Laws of 1840, which was suspended temporarily by section 245 of the Code of Procedure adopted in 1848, and amended by section 290 in 1849. Previous to the act of 1840 executions were made returnable in term time, and no fixed period of time intervened between their receipt and return by the sheriff.
It will thus be seen that the period of sixty days for the service of such process, was originally provided by the act of 1840, and has ever since remained the same, with the exception of a few months in 1848 and 1849. The reason why this period was adopted has been stated to be for the "benefit of the sheriffs." (Renaud v. O'Brien,
It undoubtedly contemplates a reasonable opportunity for the sheriff to execute the process free from unreasonable demand by an impatient creditor for more peremptory service, and authority in the sheriff to extend indulgence for a limited time to a delinquent and embarrassed debtor. (Crocker on Sheriffs, § 488;McDonald v. Neilson, 2 Cow. 139.) The opportunity for indulgence afforded by the section is certainly not for the creditor's interest, as he is justly entitled to his money upon the recovery of his judgment.
The limitation upon the right of the sheriff to hold the execution was undoubtedly for the benefit of the judgment creditor, and intended to fix a time beyond which, in the usual process of collection, his right to payment should not be postponed. This, however, does not affect the right of any party interested, to stay the enforcement of an execution for sufficient cause. The sufficiency of the cause must of course be determined by the tribunal to which application for a stay is made, and when it has adjudged that sufficient cause exists, its order, provided it has jurisdiction of the matter and the parties, is obligatory upon them and must be obeyed. It was said by MILLER, J., in Wehle v. Conner (
The statute of limitations suspends its bar against parties who are incapacitated from commencing an action by reason of disability, and the law frequently deducts from the time within which an act is to be performed, those dies non upon which the party is unable to act.
So too the time limited for the issue of an execution, or making an application for leave to do so, does not run while the plaintiff is stayed by an injunction or other order from proceeding in the matter. (§ 1382, Code of Civ. Pro.) The policy of the statute could not be accomplished, if the sheriff should be deprived of the advantageous use of the time extended to him, by injunction orders or stays of proceedings covering the whole, or even a material portion of the time allowed him to serve the writ. Suppose the sheriff is stayed during the first fifty days of the life of the process, and the remaining time does not afford him sufficient opportunity to discover property, and make the money therefrom by a sale, is it reasonable that he should be visited with a penalty for not returning the *510
process according to its requirement? Or suppose after a levy, and before a sale, his proceedings are stayed until after the return day, can he be adjudged liable for the judgment debt because he did not make return? We cannot think so. Would the sheriff be justified in the case last supposed in abandoning his levy, and returning the execution at the end of sixty days from its receipt, and yet if not, under the plaintiff's contention, he would become liable to pay the judgment. Can a sheriff be made liable for the amount of a judgment which he is debarred from collecting, but which on the sixtieth day has secured by a levy upon property sufficient to satisfy it, but which he is unable to advertise and sell by reason of the necessity of returning his writ? We think not. It is claimed if he does not return his writ, he becomes liable, and certainly if he does return it, he not only abandons the levy, but makes himself liable for the debt as for a false return. He could not, under these circumstances, protect himself from suit by advancing the money to the plaintiff, and retain the execution to reimburse himself, for this, it has been held, he could not lawfully do. (Carpenter v.Stilwell,
If the stay is granted for some alleged vice in the process, or the judgment upon which it is founded, as it usually is, why should the sheriff bear the loss occasioned by such delay, and the offending party be exempted therefrom? The law does not sanction such manifest injustice, and will give the statute a reasonable construction to avoid such a result.
We think the true policy of the statute can be satisfied only when the sheriff has sixty full days in which to perform the duties enjoined upon him. The onerous liabilities which the law imposes upon him for not returning process, for a false return, and for non-performance of his official duties, require *511 that his time for their performance should not be curtailed or limited by periods of disability.
Although the sheriff cannot levy upon property except during the life of the execution (Davoe v. Elliott, 2 Caines, 244;Hathaway v. Howell,
It is not questioned but that a stay procured by an appeal, and security given thereon, operates as a suspension of the time within which the sheriff is required to return the writ, and in such a case the sheriff retains the execution, and a levy made thereon, until the final determination of the appeal, even though years elapse; and then, in case of affirmance of the original judgment, makes the amount by virtue of his original levy. The stay effected by an appeal simply restrains the officer from collecting the execution. His power to return the writ is not in terms extended or restricted, and is not affected unless the right to enforce the writ suspends its requirement to make return within sixty days. Yet I think it has never been doubted that it was the duty of a sheriff to hold his execution and levy after appeal, and until the final determination of the case. The analogy between such a stay, and the one under discussion seems perfect, and requires us to hold that any stay which restrains the sheriff from enforcing the execution, suspends the running of the time in which he is required to return the writ.
It is also claimed by the appellant that the Bankrupt Court had no authority to make the order in question restraining the sheriff from selling the property. We think this point is not sustainable.
It cannot be questioned but that the judgment debtor, whose property has been taken by a sheriff under execution, remains its general owner, subject only to the special property acquired by the sheriff by reason of his levy, and his right to dispose of so much thereof by sale as may be required to satisfy the execution. (Scott v. Morgan,
The order in question was made by the District Court of the United States for the southern district of New York in a proceeding in bankruptcy instituted by the judgment debtor, and upon an application by him showing, among other things, the seizure by the sheriff of his property under an execution issued upon a judgment recovered in the Supreme Court by the plaintiff herein, and which was alleged to have been obtained fraudulently, and in violation of the provisions of the Bankrupt Act. The order was made on the 27th day of November, 1875, and purported to restrain the plaintiff herein and the defendant "from interfering in any way with the said property (held by the sheriff under levy) of said" bankrupt until the further order of the court. The plaintiff herein assumed the validity of this order, and appeared in the Bankrupt Court upon an application to vacate it, and for leave to the sheriff to sell under his execution. Upon this application an order was made by the Bankrupt Court on the seventeenth day of December thereafter vacating the stay and granting leave to the sheriff to sell, and plaintiff availed itself of such leave. (Dorrance v. Henderson,
Without entering into a general discussion of the jurisdiction of the Bankrupt Court, we may say that we entertain no doubt of their power to examine into the validity of alleged claims upon the bankrupt's property and restrain by temporary injunction the sale and disposition thereof, during the pendency of proceedings in bankruptcy in such court. This must result from, and is the necessary incident of, the power conferred upon them to collect and marshal the bankrupt's assets and ascertain and liquidate the liens and other specific claims thereon. (§ 4972, R.S. of U.S.) Any other view would *513 render such courts powerless to enforce the provisions referred to.
Express power to stay proceedings instituted in any court by the creditors of a bankrupt, for the collection of debts provable in bankruptcy against him, and for stay of execution thereon, is also given by section 5106 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.