1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 28 | New York Marine Court | 1876
The district court in the city of New York is, by section 9 of the Code, designated as one of the several courts of the state of New York, and therefore forms part of the judicial system of the state, and the salary of the justices of said court, upon principles of public policy, can neither be attached, reached nor taken, either upon mesne or final process, nor under supplementary proceedings founded thereon or .taken in aid thereof, if the person in whose hands the fund is attempted to be attached or taken holds the money in his official capacity as county treasurer or comptroller in common with other money, to be applied by him towards the payment of judicial or other official salaries according to law. In other words, the public moneys specifically appropriated to the payment oF judicial and other official salaries cannot be diverted from their legitimate object while in the hands of the disbursing officer of the public. The supreme court of the United States declared against such diversion of the public moneys in the case of certain seamen of the frigate Constitution (See Buchanan agt. Alexander, 4 How. U. S. Reports, 30). That learned court, in delivering its opinion, said: “That if such appropriations may be diverted and defeated by state process or otherwise, the functions of the government may be suspended; that so long as money remains in the hands of the disbursing officer it is as much the money of the United States as if it had not been drawn from the treasury; that until paid over by the agent of the government to the person entitled to it, the fund cannot, in any legal sense, be considered a part of his effects, and that the purser (who was in that case the disbursing officer) was not the debtor of the seamen.” The court, in deciding further, observed: “A purser, it would seem, cannot, in this respect, be distinguished from any other disbursing agent of the government. If the creditors of these seamen may, by process of attachment, divert the public money from its legitimate and appropriate object, the same thing may be done as regards the pay of our officers and men of the army and of the navy, and, also, in every other case where the public funds may be placed in the hands of an agent for distribution. To state such a principle is to refute it. No government can sanction it. At all times it would be found embarrassing, and, under some circumstances, it might be fatal to the public service.”
The same principle was applied to the case of a school teacher by the Kentucky court of appeals (See Tracy agt. Hornbuckle, 8 Bush, 331; 12 Albany L. J., 391; and see opinion of McAdam J., in Dubernet agt. C lyde, filed May 16, 1876). If the plaintiff is allowed to take the salary appropriated by law to the defendant’s support for the month claimed herein, he, or any other judgment creditor may, with equal propriety, appropriate the same from month to month, during the defendant’s entire official term, until all of their judgments, with costs, have been fully satisfied. It is almost needless to say that such a diversion of the public moneys by judgment creditors might seriously embarrass the disbursing officers of
The supreme court of Tennessee, in Bank of Tennessee agt. Dibrell (3 Sneed’s Reports, 379), held that “the relations of debtor and creditor, in the sense of the attachment and garnishee laws, does not exist between the state and its employees ; the funds set apart for that purpose belong to the state and not to him who renders such service, until they pass out of the treasury and the hands of disbursing agents. We held, at the last term of this court, that the pay of a pensioner ¿ould not be attached in the hands of a pension agent, nor in its transmission to him by a private person, acting under a power of attorney from him, and this upon the ground that the fund did 'not lose the protection of this principle until it reached the hands of the pensioner.”
The principles adverted to are generally applicable to all persons holding in any legal capacity the funds of another’s debtor. Clerks of courts and sheriffs (7 Humph,, 132); pursers in the navy, as to the pay of seamen (4 How. U. S., 20, supra; 2 Cranch’s C. C., 344); municipal corporations, as to the salaries of their officers (11 Missouri, 59; 6 Vermont, 121 ; 12 Conn., 404), have been held to be included in this exemption from garnishment.
The supreme court of Pennsylvania, in Bulkley agt. Eckert (3 Penn. State Reports, 368), decided that money held by a person in his official capacity as treasurer of the board of school directors — in common with other money to be applied towards the payment of teachers, according to the rules and regulations of the acts of assembly for the maintenance of public schools, and not as private debts due from him to the defendant— could not be attached under their laws.
In delivering the opinion of the court, Sergeaht, J., said : “The person in whose hands this claim was attached held the money in his official capacity as treasurer of the board of school directors, in common with other money to be applied towards the payment of teachers, according to the rules and regulations of the acts of assembly for the maintenance of public schools, and not as a private debt due from him to the defendant. His situation does not appear to us to be distinguished from that of a sheriff or a prothonotary who has’money in his hands as a pub-
In deciding the legal question presented by this application, due regard must be had to the distinction between ordinary contract debts and liabilities of a municipal corporation incurred in the government of its municipality (and which are, as a rule, enforceable against it in like manner as if it were a private corporation managing its legitimate business), and cases where the municipal corporation is acting merely in a representative capacity as trustee for the public in disbursing its moneys raised by tax levies for certain specified objects; in which last mentioned case the money, in a legal sense, does not become the property of the municipal corporation any more than if it were an incorporated trust company and, as such, had been intrusted with the administration of the trust. Chief justice Nelson, for example, in Baily agt. The Mayor, &c., of New York (3 Hill, 531), notices this distinction between the private rights, liabilities and duties of municipal corporations and the powers and duties conferred and exercised for the public benefit. For the one, they are held responsible as individuals or private corporations; in the discharge of the other, they are to be considered as having received the grant in a public or municipal character.
In Lowber agt. The Mayor, &c., of New York (7 Abb. Pr., 252), the plaintiff having obtained judgment against the defendants in the New York supreme court, issued exécution and subsequently obtained an order under section 294 of the Code for the examination of Mr. Andrew Y. Stout, the then chamberlain of the city. Upon the conclusion of the examination, a motion was made for an order directing Mr. Stout to pay to the sheriff the amount of the judgment in satisfaction thereof. Judge Inghiaham, in an opinion written by him denying the plaintiff’s motion, after referring to the above distinction said: “ The same distinction must exist as to its liability and as to the property in charge of its officers. The private property of the corporation is undoubtedly liable for its debts, and such
For these various reasons the plaintiff’s application will be denied, but without costs, and the injunction ujlon the comptroller will be dissolved. Ordered accordingly.