30 N.Y.S. 557 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs’ difficulty in this case is that the particular debt due by the defendant to Brown, to recover wdnch this action was brought, was not attached. The attachment was
“The debt for which an attachment will lie must be an actually subsisting ■debt, due, or about to become due, by efflux of time. If the liability be merely possible, and dependent upon a contingency which may never happen, attachment does not lie.’’
The rule is similarly stated in Drake on Attachment (6th Ed., § 551):
“The debt from the garnishee to the defendant, in respect of which it is sought to charge the former, must, moreover, be absolutely payable, at present or in future, and not dependent on any contingency. If the contract between the parties be of such a nature- that it is uncertain and cont'ngent whether anything will ever be due in virtue of it, it will not give rise to ■such a credit as may be attached; for that cannot properly be called a ‘debt’ which is not certainly and at all events payable either at the present ■or some future period.”
See, also, Wade, Attachm. § 17; Drake, Attachm. (6th Ed.) §§ 24, 25; and Mathot v. Bank (City Ct. N. Y.) 6 N. Y. Supp. 498.
The present case is directly within this principle. What was •due when the attachment was served has been fully paid to the sheriff. Beyond the sum so paid, there was nothing then due or ■certainly to become due to Brown. Whether anything more would thereafter become due to him depended upon a contingency; namely, the doing by him of certain work. The printing of the magazine was a condition precedent to the defendant’s liability. Where property sought to be attached is incapable of manual delivery, the law as to levying is strict. Thus, it has been held that where the levy is made by service of attachment and notice upon the person against whom the demand is made, the latter must look solely to the notice to ascertain what property is attached, and base his action thereon. Hayden v. Bank, 130 N. Y. 146, 29 N. E. 143. As to property not specified in the notice, the ■court held that the title was not divested, and the holder thereof remained liable to the owner. In Anthony v. Wood, 96 N. Y. 185, it was said by the court of appeals that that court had held, “as to the levy permitted to be made upon choses in action, that the attachment reached and became a lien only upon such debts as at the time belonged to the debtor by a legal title, and for the recovery of which he could maintain an action at law.” The learned referee acknowledges the force of the defendant’s position, and he concedes (citing Bills v. Bank, 47 N. Y. Super. Ct. 302) that, had another creditor of Brown attached this same debt after the work had been completed and the price earned, such other creditor
The respondent’s contention that the estoppel which the referee found against the defendant, with regard to its alleged offset, should also be applied to the maturity of the debt itself, is farfetched, and without merit. The statements upon which the estoppel was found had no bearing upon the maturity of the debt, but solely upon the offset; that is, upon an offset which might be made against the debt when it did mature. The estoppel did not hasten the maturity of the debt, or affect the legal relations of Brown and the defendant with regard to it. The defendant could not well estop itself into presently owing money to Brown (which the latter miuht never earn) by statements made to influence the plaintiff's conduct with regard to its rights. This action, it will be observed, is not upon the promise found by the referee in his fifteenth finding of fact, quoted by Mr. Justice Follett. Ho such promise is averred in the complaint, nor would the sheriff have been a proper party to an action founded thereon. The present action is strictly statutory. It is brought by the plaintiff in the attachment and the sheriff, jointly, to reduce to possession what was actually attached. Admit that the defendant, as stated in the sixteenth finding of fact, waived all counterclaims which it then had or might thereafter have as against Brown. The question still is, what was due to Brown, leaving out all question of counterclaims, at the time when the attachment was served? The referee sgys that the defendant’s indebtedness to Brown did not then exceed $1,651.47, and that the latter sum has since been fully paid. That would seem to dispose, at least, of this particular action. The defendant did not give the sheriff a certificate
The referee’s error results from a failure to distinguish between the rights secured to the plaintiff company by the defendant’s promise to it, and the rights which it secured under its attachment against Brown. The attachment was against Brown alone. What the plaintiff company secured thereunder it secured solely in Brown’s right, not in its own. If, therefore, when the attachment was served, Brown had no right of action against the present defendant for the sum here claimed, such sum was clearly not attached. Now, Brown concededly had then no such right of action; none in his own right; none, certainly, in the right of the plaintiff company; for the promise made to the plaintiff company was, if anything, as Mr. Justice Follett.well observes, a new anil original undertaking, founded upon a valuable consideration moving from such company. Keeping this clearly in mind, we think it apparent that the particular claim here sued on was not attached; for, as we have seen, Brown had no such claim in his own right, and it certainly was not conferred upon him by a new and • independent agreement between other parties. It follows that the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). In 1890 the defendant was the proprietor of the Cosmopolitan Magazine, which wrns published monthly; and on the 11th day of February, in that year, it entered into a contract with J. Wilson Brown, by which it sold to him type, for which he agreed to pay $808.43 on the 11th of August, 1890, and by which he also agreed to print and bind several successive monthly issues of said magazine for a price agreed on, the defendant agreeing to pay the amount due for each issue 30 days after it should be delivered by Brown to defendant. The plaintiff leased to Brown rooms in which he printed the magazine, and power with which to operate the presses. The G-ardnier Binding & Mailing Company bound the magazine for Brown; and in June, 1890, he was indebted to that corporation in the sum of $1,916.86. In June, Brown absconded, and July 3, 1890, the Gardnier Binding & Mailing Company brought an action in the superior court against him to recover $1,916.86, and on the same day attached a debt due from the defendant .to Brown. At this date the defendant was indebted to Brown in a considerable sum over all counterclaims for work previously performed. On the 12th of July, Browm was indebted to plaintiff for rent of rooms and power. On this date the August number of the magazine was on Brown’s presses. The plaintiff secured from Brown’s books a statement of the accounts between Brown and defendant, which showed that defendant was indebted to Brown in the sum of $2,459.90, and presented the statement to defendant. At this time the defendant had the right to eject Brown from the printing office, and to refuse .to furnish him with power. When the statement was presented to defendant, it asserted that it had offsets against the claim of $2,459.90, but agreed that if plaintiff would not dispossess Brown, and would furnish power to print the August number of the magazine (then on Brown’s presses), it would not set up any counterclaim against the demand of Brown against it, as shown by the statement, and amounting to $2,459.90.
The following are two of the findings in respect to the agreement between the litigants, and they are conclusive on the facts, as the record contains none of the evidence:
"(15) That on the 12th day of July, 1891, the defendant promised and agreed with the plaintiff the Excelsior Steam Power Company that the defendant would pay the account as presented by Mr. Swain, if said plaintiff would furnish the power and premises, so that defendant could get their magazine, 'which was then on Brown’s presses; that the said plaintiff furnished such power, and the defendant got their magazine. (16) That on the 12th day of July, 1891, the defendant, with full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances connected therewith, for a valuable consideration, agreed to waive, and did waive, all counterclaims and set-offs against said Brown which did then exist or which might thereafter exist in its favor by reason of the business dealings and relations theretofore had? between the defendant and said J. Wilson Brown.”
July 14,1890, the plaintiff brought an action in the supreme court against Brown to recover its debt, and on that day attached the debt owing by the defendant to Brown, and furnished rooms and power
The proposition that an attachment becomes a lien only on property or choses in action in existence when the writ is levied does not need the support of authority or of argument. A lien by legal process cannot be acquired on nothing. But this proposition does not seem to me to dispose of this case. On July 12, 1890, when the agreement between the litigants was entered into, and on the 14th of the same month, when the plaintiff levied its attachment, the defendant was actually indebted to Brown in a considerable sum over and above all counterclaims. This fact is conceded, and is established by the findings. An attachable subject existed on which the plaintiff by its warrant acquired a legal lien, subject, of course, to the lien acquired by the prior attachment of the Gardnier Binding & Mailing Company. Had the defendant remained silent, it would have had the right to have asserted whatever counterclaims it had as against the attaching creditors. But it did not remain silent. On the contrary, in the language of the finding, it agreed that it would pay the account as presented ($2,459.90) if the plaintiff would furnish the power and premises, so that defendant could get its magazine then on Brown’s presses. Pursuant to defendant’s promise, the plaintiff furnished the premises and the power, and the defendant received its August magazine in time to be issued. By this contract and the plaintiff’s performance of it, the defendant is bound, and is estopped from asserting, as against the plaintiff, a, counterclaim against the indebtedness as admitted on the 12th of July. Suppose the plaintiff had found chattels sufficient to pay its claim in defendant’s possession, which defendant admitted to be Brown’s property, and the plaintiff had attached them, and, it may be, omitted to take other attachable property. Indeed, the sheriff would have had no right to take more property than was sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s claim and costs, while in fact the defendant was the owner of part of the chattels seized.' In such a case the defendant would be estopped from proving the truth, that he owned part of the goods. Again, suppose that A. has a claim for $1,000 against B., an absconding debtor, and C. tells A. that he owes B. $1,200, which A. attaches, and omits, as he must, to attach other property. O. would be estopped from proving as against A. that, at the time he made the admission, he in fact owed B. only $500, or nothing. The supposed cases are not different in principle from the one at bar. In consideration of the plaintiff’s promise to permit the building to be occupied and its power to be
Concurrence Opinion
concurs.