64 N.J.L. 166 | N.J. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs, having recovered a judgment in this court against the defendant, issued execution thereon, which was afterward returned unsatisfied to the extent of $746. They thereupon made application for, and obtained, an order requiring the'defendant to appear before a commissioner of this court and make discovery concerning his property and things in action, and restraining him from collecting his share of the residue of the estate of his deceased father due to him under the will of the decedent.
This order is now attacked on the ground that the statute providing for discovery in aid of execution (Gen. Stat., p. 1419), under which it purports to have been made, does not justify the restraining clause contained in the order, and we are, for this reason, asked to set it aside in toto. The section under which this order was sued out provides that before the granting of such order the judgment creditor shall present a petition, verified by the oath of such creditor, his agent or attorney, in which he shall state the amount due on the execution, and his belief that the judgment debtor has property, or money or things in action due to him, &c., and then proceeds as follows: “ On allegation in said petition, or in one supplementary thereto, and proof by the oath of the party, or any other person, of facts and circumstances showing that any person owes the said debtor otherwise than for his labor or personal services, or holds money or property in possession or action in trust for him or for his use, an order may be made forbidding the payment of such debt or the transfer of said property or money by or to the said debtor until further order,” &c. The application in this present case was made upon a petition setting forth
Obviously the petition of the defendant verified in manner mentioned does not supply this statutory requirement. As evidence the affidavit is the veriest hearsay. So much of the order, therefore, as restrains the defendant from collecting his distributive share of the residue of his father’s estate must be set aside.
The fact that the restraining clause was unwarranted does not, however, vitiate the whole order. So much of it as requires the defendant to appear and make discovery is entirely unobjectionable. The statute- does not require, in order to justify the making of such an order, proof of the fact that the judgment debtor hath property, money or things in action, <&c., but proof that the petitioner believes such to be the fact; and such proof is made by the affidavit annexed to the petition. The order before us embraces two entirely distinct and independent matters. They need not both be embraced in one petition and order. They might, with propriety, have been made the ground of two several applications, and of separate judicial action. The order is clearly severable,
Neither party will be allowed costs on this application.