41 N.J.L. 1 | N.J. | 1879
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff’s right to stand as the actor in this suit is derived wholly from the receivership that was conferred upon him by the Supreme Court of the State of New York; and on the ¡Dart of the defendant, such right is contested on the ground that it is contrary to established rules for the courts here to lend their assistance in carrying into effect an office created in the course of a proceeding before a foreign tribunal. To countenance this contention various authorities are cited, and notably among them that of Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 322. But that case belongs to a train of decisions which have been undoubtedly rightly decided, but which are not to be regarded as ruling the precise point now in issue. The decisions thus referred to will be found in High on Receivers, § 239, and they are all cases involving a controversy between the receiver and the creditors of the person whose property has been placed under the control of such
In view of these considerations and authorities my conclusion is, that the legal effect of the appointment of a receiver in a foreign jurisdiction in transferring to him the right to ■collect the property passing under his control by virtue of ■such office, will be so far recognized by the courts of this state as to enable such officer to sustain a suit for the recovery of such property.
But it is also said that the declaration is substantially defective. It is certainly informal and so imperfect that upon motion it would have been set aside; and the only question is, whether, by force of our statute, it may not be supported as against a general demurrer. The defects of this pleading are very marked. For example: the appointment of a receiver is a measure incidental to a suit, and yet the pendency of such a suit is not shown, the curt averment being that the plaintiff, at a certain date, was appointed to such office by the Supreme Court .of the State of New York. So the capacities of the