155 N.Y.S. 543 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The judgment creditor herein has- obtained an order for the -appointment of a receiver of the judgment debtor, a domestic corporation. There
The judgment debtor now contends that the Code provisions in regard to the appointment óf a receiver in supplementary proceedings do not apply to domestic corporations, for section 306 of the General Corporation Law, formerly section 1810 of the Code of Civil Procedure, specifically provides that: “A receiver of the property of a corporation can be appointed only by the court, and in one of the following cases,” and a proceeding supplementary to execution is not one of the cases mentioned in that section. In the case of Rabbe v. Astor Trust Co., 61 Misc. Rep. 650, this court squarely held that a justice of the court had power to appoint a receiver of a domestic corporation in supplementary proceeding^. Since that time the justices of the City Court have
Prior to the amendment of Code section 2463 by chapter 278 of the Laws of 1908, that section provided: “ This article does not apply where the judgment debtor is a corporation created by or under the laws' of this state, or a foreign corporation specified in section 1812 of this act, except in those actions or special proceedings brought by or against the people of the state,” etc. That section was interpreted by the Court of Appeals in the case of Logan v. McCall Publishing Co., 140 N. Y. 447, and the court stated: “ The only-limitation upon the right to take proceedings supplementary to execution against any class of debtors- is contained in section 2463, and this plainly does not embrace a foreign corporation doing no business and having no agency in this state.” That limitation was stricken from Code section 2463, and this court consequently held that thereafter there was no limitation upon the right to take proceedings supplementary to execution and that a receiver could be appointed in supplementary proceedings against even a domestic corporation. The correctness of this conclusion depends, I think, entirely upon the determination of what the Court of Appeals meant by the words “ right to take proceedings supplementary to execution.” and whether such right includes the right to the appointment of a receiver. Upon this question it seems to me very significant that the limitation - contained in section 246-3 previous to its amendment expressly referred
I think a fair reading of our statutes clearly shows that the policy of the state does preclude one judgment creditor from obtaining a preference upon the assets of a domestic corporation. Not only does section 306 of the General Corporation Law expressly provide limitations upon the appointment of a receiver of such a corporation but section 100 of the same law expressly provides for sequestration actions by judgment creditors and a distribution ‘ ‘ in the order and in the proportions prescribed by law in case of the voluntary dissolution of a corporation.” In view of these provisions of the law, I think that no fair inference can possibly be drawn that the legislature in repealing an express limitation applicable to Article 1 of Title XII . of the Code intended also to change the general policy of the law and remove all limitations imposed by such policy upon the power to appoint receivers as provided
Order should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs, and motion to vacate granted, with ten dollars costs.
Order reversed.