143 N.Y. 342 | NY | 1894
The order from which this appeal is taken perpetually enjoined the plaintiff from further prosecuting the *345 action. The action was replevin to recover the possession of two certificates of deposit issued to the plaintiff by the Marine Bank of Buffalo, payable to his order, one in 1881, and one in 1883. The defendant is the clerk of Erie county, and after the commencement of the action, and before the execution by the sheriff of the requisition requiring him to replevy the certificates, further proceedings were stayed on his application until the executors or representatives of Elizabeth and George Rockwell were brought in as parties defendant. The plaintiff appealed from the order of the Special Term to the General Term, and the order was affirmed by that court, with a modification, however, by which the stay was made absolute. The General Term proceeded on the ground that the certificates were held by the defendant as the officer of the court, and that the commencement of an action to replevy them, against the defendant, without the leave of the court, which had not been obtained, was a contempt of its authority. We think the orders of the Special and General Terms were erroneous and that a stay of the plaintiff's proceedings, either conditional or absolute, was unauthorized.
It must be assumed on this appeal that the certificates were the property of the plaintiff. They are unindorsed, and the title of the plaintiff is asserted in the affidavit in the replevin proceedings. It is admitted that they are in the custody of the defendant and that he refused to deliver them to the plaintiff. The action of replevin was, therefore, brought against him, and it was no defense that he was in possession as agent of another, who had no right to possession as against the true owner. The owner of a chattel may in general replevy from any person who has it in possession and who has no right to retain it as against him. (Hall v. White,
We know of no principle which entitled the court, under the circumstances disclosed, to impound the certificates and place them beyond the reach of the writ of replevin, at the suit of the true owner. The purpose of the court in directing the detention seems to have been the protection of the bank which issued them, pending any further litigation as to the validity of the judgment. The reversal of the judgment rendered any further control of the certificates by the court or its officer unnecessary for the purpose indicated. The direction of the trial judge, that the certificates should be retained by the clerk until the further order of the court, was a summary *347
assumption of authority, and clothed the clerk with no immunity from liability to respond in an action by the true owner to recover the certificates. The principle that where the court has, in the administration of justice, gained possession through its receiver or other officer, of the property in litigation, it is deemed to be in the custody of the law, and that this custody cannot be disturbed without permission of the court, has here no appropriate application. The principle applies only where there is a lawful possession under a lawful order of the court, and even in cases where property is in the hands of the receiver lawfully appointed, the courts are very cautious not to embarrass persons claiming title hostile to the receiver from pursuing the usual legal remedies for the enforcement of their rights. A receiver is not protected under a general order appointing him receiver of the property of a bankrupt or other person against replevin or other common-law action brought by a third person, claiming paramount title to property in his possession as receiver. (Corn Exchange Bank v. Blye,
The plaintiff was not bound to procure the appointment of representatives of the estates of Mrs. Rockwell and her husband and to apply to have them brought in as defendants. The Code gives a remedy where a third person makes a claim to the property involved in a replevin action (Code, §§ 1709 and 1710), and whatever might be done in procuring a substitution of the real claimant of a hostile title to that of the plaintiff, as defendant in place of the original defendant, must be done by the defendant. That burden he cannot impose on the plaintiff. The clerk may be put to trouble and expense in defending the action, without any fault of his own, but he stands as any other custodian of property who has assumed and strives to retain the custody as against the true owner, without lawful authority.
The orders of the Special and General Terms should be reversed, with costs.
All concur.
Orders reversed. *349