| New York Court of Common Pleas | Mar 15, 1859

Hilton, J.

—It is only when a transcript of a justice’s judgment is filed, that it becomes a judgment of this court. (Code, § 68.) And after the return of an execution issued upon it unsatisfied, a judge of this court may require the defendant to appear and be examined upon supplementary proceedings. (§292.)

On the return of the order granted in this case, requiring the defendants to show cause why they should not be punished as for a contempt in disobeying the order directing them to appear and be examined concerning their property, it is made to appear on their behalf, that there is no such judgment docketed against them in this court, as that described in the affidavit on which these proceedings were instituted ; the affidavit showing *63a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against “ Ira Weed and Mary Weed,” while the transcript docketed is of a judgment against “ Ira Weed and Mrs. Weed.”

This seems to me to be a fatal objection, affecting the jurisdiction of the judge granting the order, and one which cannot be obviated by amendment.

The order supplementary must he predicated upon the fact that an execution has been issued on a specified and existing judgment, and returned unsatisfied in whole or in part. But when no such fact exists, the judge possesses no power to make the order for the examination of a party, or if made upon an affidavit specifying a judgment which has no existence, he can have no power to enforce obedience to its requirements.

When a special statutory jurisdiction is conferred, it must be strictly followed; and if at any stage of the proceeding it ap¡3ears that the alleged facts upon which jurisdiction is based do not exist, it is the duty of the judge to dismiss the parties.

Jurisdiction in cases like the present is not a personal privilege which can be waived, nor can consent confer it; and if in any case the facts which authorize its exercise do not exist, the whole proceeding is coram non judice, and void. (Dudley a. Mayhew, 3 Comst., 9.)

Motion for attachment denied.

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