35 N.Y.S. 525 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The plaintiff, the sheriff of Bockland county, brings this action to recover damages of the defendants, for their alleged taking from him and converting to their own use certain chattels in which he claims to have had a special property by virtue of his levy thereon, under two warrants of attachment, followed by two executions upon the final judgments in the same actions. I do not see how he may prevail. He received two warrants of attachment against the property of the A. H. Jackman Manufacturing Company in two actions
There is another reason fatal to the plaintiff. Judgments were afterwards entered in the two actions and executions issued thereon. Thereafter the receiver obtained authority of the Supreme Court to sell the property at public auction. The plaintiff threatened that he would not allow the property to be sold; whereupon the attorneys for the receiver obtained and served upon him an order to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court, and meanwhile restraining him from interfering with the receiver’s possession, or the sale. Before the return day of such order the receiver sold the property according to the pending advertisement. The plaintiff was present and gave public notice that he had a lien upon the property by virtue of the said attachments and executions, and objected to the sale. The defendants herein became the purchasers. Then the plaintiff put a keeper over the property, and announced that he would not allow it to be removed. The attorneys for the receiver then notified the attachment creditors and their attorneys that unless the interference of the sheriff ceased they would also move to punish them for contempt of court as his abettors. A reciprocal arrangement was thereupon made between the attorneys for the receiver and the attorneys for the attachment creditors, by which the contempt proceedings pending and contemplated were abandoned and the sheriff upon the direction of the attachment creditors withdrew his keeper. The receiver
I think there is another reason against the plaintiff’s recovering. If he got any lien by listing the property, and retained it notwithstanding his leaving the property in the adverse ■custody in which he found it, the receiver nevertheless found the property not in his possession, but in' that of the dissolving corporation, and- took and kept actual possession of it as the court’s officer, and sold it by the court’s, authority. The •said corporation had the legal title to it, subject only to the lien of the attachments (Scott v. Morgan,, 94 N. Y. 508), and that same title the receiver took, along with the actual possession. The only course, therefore, open to the plaintiff after the receiver’s- sale was to apply to the Supreme Court for a direction to its receiver to satisfy such lien out of the pro-needs of sale. Albany City Bank v. Schermerhorn, 10 Paige, 263. It cannot be that the purchasers at the receiver’s sale may be treated as trespassers for buying the property; for in so far as such purchasers and all creditors and claimants ■of the dissolving corporation were concerned the dissolution proceedings, and the sale of the property therein, were, by force of the statute under which they were had, in rein, and all controversies in respect of interests and priorities passed to the fund.
Judgment for the defendants.
Ordered accordingly.