95 N.Y. 486 | NY | 1884
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *488 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *490
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *491 The judgment in the action of Hawley et al. v. Pierce etal. was not final. It adjudged that the assignment made by defendants Pierce and Haggerty to defendant Beckwith was fraudulent as against the creditors of the assignors, and that it was null and void; that the assignee should account for the assigned property which came into his hands which was found to be of the value of $3,000; that a receiver should be appointed of the property of the assignors in their hands or in the hands of their assignee; that from the proceeds of such property the receiver should first pay the costs of that action, taxed at $100.07; that from the remainder he should pay the plaintiffs in that action for their judgment against the assignors $178.35 and interest thereon from February 5, 1878, and that he report the remainder, with his proceedings, to the court for, and subject to its further order and direction.
The learned counsel for the appellants claims that the judgment was final and calls our attention to the case of Produce Bank
v. Morton (
The judgment thus entered and docketed could have been enforced by execution, and not by such process as was issued in this case. The rule is furnished by the Revised Statutes (Part 3, chap. 8, title 13), which both parties assume to have been in force at the time the process was granted. Section 1 provides, among other things, for punishing by fine and imprisonment parties to suits for the non-payment of any sum ordered by the court to be paid, "in cases where by law execution cannot *493
be awarded for the collection of such sum." Section 4, under which the plaintiff seeks to justify this process, reads as follows: "Where any rule or order of a court shall have been made for the payment of costs or any other sum of money, and proof by affidavit shall be made of the personal demand of such sum of money, and of a refusal to pay it, the court may issue a precept to commit the person so disobeying to prison, until such sum and the costs and expenses of the proceedings be paid." This section must be construed in harmony with the prior provision cited, and authorizes the precept mentioned only in cases where an execution cannot be issued. It does not, therefore, apply to a case where money has been ordered to be paid by a final judgment, and so it has been uniformly held. (Lansing v. Lansing, 4 Lans. 377;Strobridge v. Strobridge, 21 Hun, 288; Baker v. Baker,
23 id. 356; People, ex rel. Fries, v. Riley, 25 id. 587;Randall v. Dusenbury, 41 N.Y. Supr. Ct. 456; Matter ofWatson v. Nelson,
The plaintiffs in the action in which the receiver and referee were appointed could acquire no right to a precept for the arrest of the assignee by omitting to enter their final judgment. They could not evade the statutes in that way. They or their receiver, having the right to enter the judgment and enforce payment of the same by execution, could not enforce the same by attaching the assignee for contempt in refusing to pay.
It follows that the precept for the arrest of the assignee was unauthorized; that he was illegally arrested; that the sheriff had no right to exact or take the bond, and that the defendant as surety thereto has not been made liable thereon.
The judgment of the General Term should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *494