199 A.D. 194 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The Endicott-Johnson Company was a partnership conducting a manufacturing business and employing many persons. On the 1st day of April, 1919, the Endicott-Johnson Corporation, this defendant, was organized to take over the business of the partnership, and it took over all the assets and assumed all the liabilities of the partnership on April 17, 1919. Three
The plaintiff in this action was the judgment creditor in the third execution set forth in the complaint. The first and second causes of action are based upon judgments and garnishee executions procured by others than the plaintiff herein, and they, judgment creditors of the employees of the defendant, have each assigned, prior to the commencement of the action, all the right, title and interest in and to the judgment, execution and right of action thereunder, to the plaintiff, who thereupon became the true and lawful owner thereof in each case. Section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “ It shall be the duty of any person or corporation, municipal or otherwise, to whom said execution shall be presented, and who shall at such time be indebted to the judgment debtor named in such execution, or who shall become indebted to such judgment debtor in the future, and while said execution shall remain a lien upon said indebtedness to pay over to the officer presenting the same, such amount of such indebtedness as such execution shall prescribe until said execution shall be wholly satisfied, and such payment shall be a bar to any action therefor by any such judgment debtor. If such person .pr corporation, municipal or otherwise, to whom said execution shall be presented shall fail, or refuse to pay over to said officer presenting said execution, the percentage of said indebtedness, he shall be liable to an action therefor by the judgment creditor named in such execution, and the amount so recovered by such judgment creditor shall be applied towards the payment of said execution.”
The causes of action set forth in the complaint are based upon this last-quoted provision of the statute, and it is claimed
The general rule is that all rights of action in tort, which do not apply to the person strictly, but are for injury to one’s property or estate, are assignable. (5 C. J. 889.) A right of action for the wrongful conversion of personal property is assignable. (McKee v. Judd, 12 N. Y. 622.) A right of action under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (26 U. S. Stat. at Large, 209, chap. 647; Id. 210, § 7),
In the instant case the action is to recover the amount due on a contract. All the facts are established necessary to subject this defendant, because it failed to obey the statute, to liability for this contract debt. The fact that the liability is given by statute does not change its nature. This statutory liability does not run to a particular class, nor is it in the nature of a personal privilege, not intended by the statute to be enjoyed by another, as in the case of a penalty; it is a
The appellant contends that the statute (Code Civ. Proc. § 1391) is unconstitutional and offends against public policy. The judgment against the employee was regularly recovered and was valid. The execution issued thereon and returned unsatisfied was the usual and legal process for realizing the amount found due by the judgment. The garnishee execution is simply a remedial process allowed by statute to be issued by the court, or a judge of a court of record, without notice to the judgment debtor and upon satisfactory proof of the required facts, to collect the amount due on the judgment; but either party may at any time apply to the court for a modification of the execution. We think the Court of Appeals has passed upon these questions. In Laird v. Carton (196 N. Y. 169) it held that an execution against wages, under section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure, can lawfully be issued on a judgment recovered before the amendment of September 1, 1908 (Laws of 1908, chap. 148), which permitted that such an execution issue on any money judgment. If the statute were unconstitutional the execution could not have been lawfully issued. In Brearley School v. Ward (201 N. Y. 358) the court passed directly on the constitutionality of this statute, holding that an execution can lawfully be issued, under this section of the Code, against the income of a trust fund. Gray, J., dissented, not upon the ground that the law was unconstitutional, but on the ground that the statute in question did not affect trusts created prior to its enactment.
Present — John M. Kellogg, P. J., Woodward, Cochrane, H. T. Kellogg and Van Kirk, JJ.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.
See 38 U. S. Stat. at Large, 730, chap. 323; Id. 731, § 4 — [Rep.