79 N.Y. 267 | NY | 1879
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This case has lately been before us, but on this appeal presents a new question. It was then decided that the referee did not err in rejecting certain claims upon the ground that they had not been presented within the time limited by an order made by the Supreme Court on the 26th day of February, 1877, to the effect that notice should be *270
published requiring all persons having claims of any kind against the above named company to exhibit them to the receiver and become parties to the proceeding within six months from the time of the first publication of the order. (
Nor is the power of the court limited by statute except in one particular. The propriety or necessity of the order is to be determined by the court; it may direct the manner of its publication, — the time within which the creditors may come in may be prescribed by the court. It must be a reasonable time; but, — and this is the only statutory command, — it must be "not less than six months." It may be more. (§ 56, ante.) In all else the judgment and discretion of the court may be exercised, to the same extent as in other proceedings or actions. Subject therefore to this limitation, the time within which demands shall be presented is prescribed by the court, and the case is unlike that of an appeal, to which the learned counsel for the appellant refers, where the time within which it must be taken is fixed by statute, and that the court cannot extend it, is well settled. (Salles v. Butler,
All concur.
Appeal dismissed.