82 A.D. 474 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This is an appeal from an order of the Special Term of the Supreme Court taxing a bill for poundage of the sheriff of the ;
The authority, if it exists, is contained in the provisions of chapter 523 of the Laws of 1890, entitled “ An act in relation to the
The act in question must be deemed to intend something supplementary and additional to the general provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to attachments. Sections 682 and 683 of the Code provide for the vacation of an attachment in case it cannot for any reason be sustained as valid, and sections 687 and 688 provide for its discharge upon the giving of an undertaking for that purpose by the defendant. If the attachment is either vacated or discharged it is provided by section 709- that the sheriff must restore the property to the defendant upon payment of all costs, charges and expenses. In view of these provisions of the Code it' is obvious that the provision of the sjiecial act herein referred to, authorizing the court to make an order requiring the party liable therefor to pay the sheriff’s poundage where the warrant of attachment. is either vacated, set aside or discharged by order of the court, is designed to embrace both ■ the case of an annulment of the writ because of invalidity, or for any other reason justifying such annulment, and of a discharge of the writ because of the giving of security by the defendant, or for any other cause analogous thereto, and requiring or justifying such discharge. In this view the provision of the special act limiting the sheriff to a retention of the property attached until his fees and poundage are paid, relates chiefly, if not solely, to the case of a settlement of the action by the parties. The distinction-between the two provisions, viz., that which permits, an order requiring the payment of the sheriff’s fees and that which
An additional distinction between the setting aside and the discharge of an attachment was pointed out in the case of Lawlor v. Magnolia Metal Co. (2 App. Div. 552), and it was held that the effect of an order or judgment vacating the attachment is an adjudication that the property was illegally seized and that the sheriff is retaining it without any process, but that where the attachment is discharged by the giving of an undertaking the attachment still lives and< the undertaking is substituted in place of the levy. It was further held in that case, the court adopting an opinion delivered at Special Term by Mr. Justice Ingraham in the unreported case of Union Square Bank v. Reichmann, that (p. 555) “ the Legislature intended, by subdivision 2 of section 17 of chapter 523 of the Laws of 1890, as,amended by chapter 418 of the Laws of 1892, to allow the sheriff to retain possession of the property levied upon until his fees and poundage are paid, whether the attachment was discharged by order of the court, or the action was settled; and while that provision would be inoperative in a case where the attachment was vacated because it was improperly granted, and the plaintiff was not entitled to have the defendant’s property held to secure any judgment that he might obtain, it is operative where it appeared that the attachment was properly obtained, and the action was either settled or the attachment discharged by reason of the substitution of other security.”
There is no claim made in this case that the- attachment was improperly granted, nor has ah undertaking been given by the defendant in either action. The learned counsel for the appellant insists, however, that this action has not been settled and that the payment of the claim by the principal debtor, the Alabama Dredging and Jetty Company, served only to absolve this defendant from the obli
The case of Treadwell & Co. v. Mead Mfg. Co. (75 App. Div. 478), relied upon by the appellant, is accordingly inapplicable. It appears by the record in that case that the action was settled by the parties and an order of discontinuance entered, and the only question presented on the appeal was whether under such circumstance's authority existed to order the payment of the sheriff’s poundage. The conclusion reached was that the court had power to tax the fees and poundage, but had no power to cornpel the party to- the action liable therefor to pay the same. The court held that the only remedy the sheriff had in such a case was to retain the property until his poundage was - paid or to sue the party liable for the amount thereof as taxed. The provision of the special act authorizing the enforcement of the liability by order was not considered. The statement in the opinion that that act contains no. authority for such - an order refers only to a case such as was. then under consideration, viz., where the action was terminated because of payment or settlement and the attachment thereupon discharged. It cannot be assumed to relate to a case where the attachment, has been vacated, set aside or discharged by order of the court, but the action continues unsettled and undetermined.
The authority conferred by the statute was considered by the same Appellate Division in the case of Tribune Association v. Eisner & Mendelson Co. (49 App. Div. 141), and although the order in that case was reversed because there was no proof to justify the amount of the poundage as . taxed, the -court called
In the case at bar the attachment was vacated by an order of the court made apparently expa/rte so far as the sheriff was concerned. Upon the service of the order the defendant’s attorney promised, according to the affidavit of a deputy sheriff, that his client would pay the poundage, and this averment is only denied to the extent that it is denied that any promise was made on behalf of this defendant. The same attorney represented both defendants, and whatever was done in the interest of one was necessarily for the benefit of the other. '
The question of the constitutionality of the provision of the statute under consideration does not appear to have been raised at the Special Term, and has not been presented by the brief submitted on this appeal, and need not, therefore, be determined. (Dodge v. Cornelius, 168 N. Y. 242, and cases cited.)
The order should be affirmed.
Woodward, Jerks and Hooker, JJ., concurred; Goodrich, P. J., dissented.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Laws of 1892, chap. 418, § 1, amdg. Laws of 1890, chap. 523, § 17, subd. 2.— [Rep.