118 N.Y.S. 922 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1909
This is a motion by plaintiff to adjudge guilty and punish as for a contempt of court Max E. Bloch, a surety upon an undertaking ordered by the court to be given for the protection of the plaintiff, as a condition of releasing by the court a levy of an execution against the property of Benjamin Koronsky, in plaintiff’s favor, for the offense of fraudulently divesting himself of his property, for the unlawful purpose of making nugatory the said protectory provision of said order and of impairing, impeding, prejudicing and defeating plaintiff’s lawful rights and remedies in this action.
A chronological history of the events incident to this action is necessary to a complete understanding of the application now before me. The action is for goods sold and delivered to the defendants, and resulted, on his default in appearance, in a judgment for plaintiff against Benjamin Koronsky for $1,210.03. An execution was thereafter duly issued to collect said judgment and a levy thereof duly made on certain property of the defendant Benjamin Koronsky. On the day following the levy in question the said Benjamin Koronsky obtained ex parte an order of this court requiring plaintiff to show cause why said judgment and levy should not be set aside as a matter of right for want of service of summons and complaint on or jurisdiction over the person of said Benjamin Koronsky, and also staying all proceedings on the part of plaintiff and the sheriff to enforce the levy in question. On the return of said order an order was made referring the issues of fact as to service of process and directing that the levy of execution be set aside pending the said inquiry, upon the furnishing by said defendant, for the pro
Does, therefore, the conduct of Bloch in so disposing of his property constitute a civil contempt of court punishable summarily? That is the question to be determined hereon. There are four elements essential to the prosecution of con-tempts, and these are: 1. An offense within the definition of section 14, Code of Civil Procedure, or of the common law. 2. The operation of that offense to cause impairment, prejudice or defeat to rights and remedies of the adversary. 3. The further operation of that offense to cause actual loss or injury to the adversary. 4. That there be no other remedy for recoupment prescribed by law, which means, of course, statute law. Dollard v. Koronsky, 61 Misc. Rep. 392, 398; aff’d by App. Term and App. Div. At common law the offense of contempt has been held to be the tendency thereof to obstruct the administration of justice in a pending cause, thereby rendering nugatory the court’s decree and bringing it into disrepute and disrespect among men. For instance, in Saal v. South Brooklyn R. Co., 122 App. Div. 364, 368, it is said that “to constitute a constructive contempt of court some act must be done not in the presence of the court or judge that tends to obstruct the administration of justice or bring the court or judge or the administration of justice into disrespect.” That section 14 of the Code includes within its purview all offenses which are contempts
But by its very terms the section, at subdivision 4, also defines a contempt as including “ any other unlawful interference with the proceeding therein.” Accordingly, it has been held that a transfer of property for the purpose of rendering nugatory an equity decree about to be rendered is an unlawful interference, and as such a contempt. Greite v. Hendricks, 71 Hun, 11, 13. So also, in People v. Kearney, 21 How. Pr. 74, it was held a contempt for one sued for the custody of children to, pendente lite, deliberately send them to a foreign country so that it would be beyond his power to comply with such judgment as should be rendered. And this is rightly so, on the broad principle that it is the duty of the court to protect its suitors as well as to punish its offenders. A court without this power would be an anomaly in legal jurisprudence. Viewing the testimony of the surety Bloch in the light of the authorities cited, the conclusion is irresistible that he disposed of his property, as aforesaid, with the deliberate intention of making his obligation nugatory, and he has succeeded in so doing. His conduct, therefore, was a direct interference, not alone with this action, but with the ultimate proceedings in aid of the judgment. It was an interference which impeded the administration of justice, and impaired and in the end actually defeated the right of the plaintiff; and, in my opinion, was planned and intended to effect just that result, and clearly comes within the provisions of the Code defining a civil contempt. It is apparent that no other remedy at law exists whereby plaintiff can recoup his damages herein. But, assuming that there
This brings us then to the question of the punishment to be accorded for the offense so committed. The conduct of Bloch in the disposition of his property and his apparent perjurous testimony to lend legal semblance thereto affect not only the honor and dignity of the court’s decree, but also the value of the protection given to the plaintiff thereby. If conduct such as this is not summarily met with and condemned in severest terms, then indeed will the administration of justice by its proper officers be brought into well-merited disrepute among men.
It is urged; however, that, if the court upon the papers presented construes the conduct of Bloch as contemptuous, then he is entitled, as a matter of right, to a reference to determine whether the acts alleged constituting such contempt be true or not. There is no valid basis for a claim of this kind. In Buffalo L. T. & S. D. Co. v. Medina G. & E. L. Co., 68 App. Div. 414, which was a proceeding to punish for an offense of false justifying by a surety, a reference was demanded and refused. The court there, at page 420, very pertinently said: “ This is not a case in which the court should struggle to relieve the appellant from the difficulty in which he has placed himself. The contempt with which he stands charged was flagrant in the extreme and without any mitigating circumstances. As was said by Ingraham, J., in a somewhat similar case: ‘ It is time that parties who engage in such an attempt as this to deceive the court and induce it to adopt a course which results in defrauding one whom the court is bound to protect should be summarily dealt with and taught that if such a scheme is successful it involves consequences much more serious than the payment of the amount of which a party is defrauded.’ ”
My conclusion, therefore, is that a fine must be imposed in this case, with imprisonment until the same, is paid, in addition to a separate term of imprisonment whether the fine is liquidated or not. Concerning the amount of the fine, section 2284 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that
In conclusion, let it be said that a further duty rests upon the plaintiff herein. The zeal with which he has prosecuted this matter for the lasting benefit of the law and the honor of the courts should inspire him 'to go further and bring to the attention of the Appellate Division of this department the reprehensible conduct of Bloch’s “ regular ” lawyer, so-called, and also that of the lawyer who appeared for him on the undertaking suit. Their behavior warrants the severest condemnation, tarred as they are with the same stick that
Note.— Mr. William A. Sweetser, who argued in defense of Bloch on this motion had no part in the transactions set forth in the above opinion. The admonition in the closing paragTaph does not refer to him.
Motion granted.