43 Misc. 603 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1904
This is a motion to vacate an order directiing that an execution issue against the wages and salary of
Section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended by the Laws of 1903, chapter 461, so as to provide that “ Where a judgment has been recovered wholly for necessaries sold, or work performed in a family as a domestic, or for services rendered for salary owing to an employee of the judgment debtor, and where an execution issued upon said judgment has been returned wholly or partly unsatisfied and where any wages, debts, earnings, salary, income from trust funds or profits are due and owing to the judgment debtor or shall thereafter become due and owing to him, to an amount exceeding twenty dollars per week and where no execution issued as hereafter provided in this section is unsatisfied and outstanding against said judgment debtor, the judgment creditor may apply to the court in which said judgment was recovered and upon satisfactory proof of such facts by affidavit or otherwise, the court, if a court not of record, a judge or justice thereof, must issue, or if a court of record, a judge or a justice, must grant an order directing that an execution issue against the wages, debt, earnings, salary, income from trust funds or profits of said
This section makes it the duty of “ any person or corporation ” to whom such execution shall be presented or from whom such an indebtedness is due or to become due to pay the prescribed percentage of such indebtedness to the sheriff to be applied in satisfaction of the debt due from the judgment debtor. The question presented for determination upon this motion is whether a municipal corporation such as the city of ¡New York is within the contemplation of this section of the Code of Civil Procedure.
In attempting to discover the intention of the Legislature in the enactment of this provision, it must be construed with
The law in respect to these principles has frequently been defined and is well settled.
It is now settled beyond dispute that the wages or salary of a public officer or employee, although due, cannot be reached before it comes into his possession by a third party order in supplementary proceedings on behalf of the judgment creditor. This question has been so fully discussed by Mr. Justice McAdam in Remmey v. Gedney, 57 How. Pr. 217, and has been so often followed with approval that further comment upon it is unnecessary. The reason for the rule was briefly summarized in Bliss v. Lawrence, 58 N. Y. 442, 451, where the court said that “ The substance of it all is, the necessity of maintaining the efficiency of the public service by seeing to it that public salaries really go to those who perform the public service.” The rule has been applied in a great variety of cases. The same principle was applied by the Hnited States Supreme Court in the ease of certain seamen of the frigate Constitution, entitled to money in the hands of a purser (Buchanan v. Alexander, 4 How. [U. S.] 20), and has been held applicable to moneys in the control of clerks of courts (Drane v. McGavock, 7 Humphr. 132), and to money due a common-school teacher in the hands of the school commissioner (Tracy & Loyd v. Hornbuckle, 8 Bush, 336), and to the salary of a police officer in the hands of his captain (Gray v. Ashley, 24 Misc. Rep. 396.)
There are many reasons why the officers of the city government should not have their actions controlled for the sake merely of allowing a judgment creditor to satisfy his claims against a debtor. In such a case public interests intervene and are paramount to the private interests of the creditor.- If the section under consideration is applicable to municipal corporations the officers of the city may be directed to pay the salary of an employee to the sheriff and must appear in re
Bearing in mind these well-settled rules of public policy, I think it is clear that the Legislature intended that section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by the Laws of 1903, should be construed with due regard to them. To indulge the presumption that the Legislature intended to abrogate these well-settled rules would, in my judgment, be unreasonable. Such a construction should not be placed upon the statute in the absence of language which clearly indicates that such was the intention of the Legislature. Where a statute is of doubtful or ambiguous meaning and is susceptible of two interpretations, one in. accord with well-settled rules of public policy and one in violation of these rules, it
It follows, therefore, that the order under which execution was issued should be vacated and set aside, and that the comptroller of the city of New York should be relieved of the restraining clause therein contained.
Motion granted.