176 Misc. 93 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1941
This is a motion by the defendant, a non-resident of this State, to vacate the warrant of attachment and levy made thereunder, and to set aside the default judgment entered herein after service on the defendant by publication.
Plaintiff sued the defendant for a breach of contract and commenced the action by an attachment and service on the defendant by publication. The defendant has not appeared personally. The warrant of attachment was leviéd on property in this jurisdiction, constituting the defendant’s interest in his deceased brother’s estate. The sheriff made this levy by serving a certified copy of the warrant on the trustee of this estate on September 25, 1940. On October 17, 1940, the trustee filed a certified copy of a schedule with the sheriff pursuant to section 918 of the Civil Practice Act listing the assets held by the trustee for the account of the defendant. On December 31, 1940, ninety-nine days after the levy, a default judgment was entered awarding the plaintiff a money judgment.
The defendant argues that the attachment herein must be declared void because subdivision 2 of section 922 of the Civil Practice Act was not complied with in any of the following respects :
(1) The sheriff did not take actual possession or obtain an assignment of the attached property within ninety days of the service of the warrant;
(2) Neither the sheriff nor the plaintiff jointly or severally has commenced any action or proceeding to obtain custody, payment or an assignment of the attached, property within ninety days of the service of the warrant;
(3) The plaintiff has not applied to the court for any extension of this ninety-day period.
The defendant alleges that the attached property is capable of manual delivery and thus is clearly governed by subdivision 2 of section 922. The defendant also urges that no money judgment can be entered by a court in an action in rem, and, therefore, that the money judgment entered herein must be vacated for this additional reason.
This is the first case involving an interpretation of the new amendments to the Civil Practice Act relating to attachments, which amendments became effective September 1, 1940 (Laws of 1940, chap. 625). These amendments were intended to abolish certain unjust rules which applied to the attachment of property (see, for example, Anthony v. Wood, 96 N. Y. 180), and provide a simple, uniform and safe method of levying attachments, protecting adverse claims to the attached property by third parties, and safeguarding attachment garnishees. (Association of the Bar of the City of N. Y., Bulletin of Committee on State Legislation, p. 197, Feb. 27, 1940; “ The Streamlining of Attachment Procedure,” by Prof. John F. X. Finn, 9 Fordham Law Rev. pp. 1, 2, Jan. 1940.) The amendments must be interpreted with these purposes in mind.
There can be no question that the sheriff made a valid levy upon the defendant’s interest in his deceased brother’s estate “ by leaving a certified copy of the warrant * * * with the executor or trustee under the will.” (Civ. Prac. Act, § 917, subd. 2.) It is the effect and duration of such a levy that are now in dispute.
Subdivision 2 of section 922 of the Civil Practice Act provides as follows: “ In the event that within ninety days from the issuance of the warrant, unless the time has been extended as herein provided, and in that event prior to the expiration of the time as so extended, the sheriff has not taken into his actual custody all such property capable of manual delivery, or has not received payment of, or an assignment evidencing the right of, the sheriff to collect and to enforce the debts, effects or things in action attached, and if no action or special proceeding for that purpose has then been commenced by the sheriff or by the plaintiff jointly with the sheriff
Of course if the defendant’s contention were correct, that the property herein attached consists entirely of property that is capable of manual delivery, then clearly the ninety-day limitation of subdivision 2 of section 922 of the Civil Practice Act would apply. However, I shall proceed on the assumption that at least part of defendant’s interest herein attached consists of an interest in an undistributed and unliquidated estate and, therefore, that at least part of the property attached is not capable of manual delivery. (See Backus v. Kimball, 62 Hun, 122.)
The plaintiff first argues that the duration and effect of the levy made by the sheriff are governed by subdivision 5 of section 916 of the Civil Practice Act (originally section 648 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by chapter 416 of the Laws of 1877), which subdivision refers specifically to an interest in an estate. This subdivision provides in part: “ The levy of the attachment thereupon is deemed a levy upon, and a seizure and attachment of the rights and interest of the defendant at the time of such levy.” (Italics mine.) From this the plaintiff concludes that “ seizure and attachment ” mean physical possession, and that consequently the sheriff actually takes an interest in an estate into his possession and custody upon service of the warrant on the executor or trustee under the decedent’s will. Therefore, the plaintiff urges that the ninety-day limitation contained in subdivision 2 of section 922 of the Civil Practice Act was not intended to apply to a defendant’s interest in an estate because in the eyes of the law the sheriff already has such an interest in his possession from the time of the levy.
I do not believe that subdivision 5 of section 916 can be given the significance assigned to it by the plaintiff. To begin with, section 916 itself is headed “ Debt or evidence thereof; cause of action on contract, debt; claim to estate or trust fund; subject to attachment,” and the section begins: “ The attachment may also be levied upon:” after which follow six subdivisions of which No. 5 is presently pertinent. Thus section 916 is merely definitive of what types of
Subdivision 2 of section 922 is broadly worded so as to include such property as “ property capable of manual delivery ” and “ debts, effects or things in action.” Clearly this language is sweeping enough to embrace any property or interest upon which a valid levy has been made. Therefore, I conclude that the words “ seizure and attachment,” as used in section 916, merely mean that by the levy the sheriff has “ seized ” all of the defendant’s rights to the exclusion of any subsequent lienors, subject, however, to a condition subsequent, namely, compliance with the ninety-day limitation contained in subdivision 2 of section 922.
The plaintiff also argues that the time limitation contained in subdivision 2 of section 922 does not apply to subdivision 3 of section 922, and that, therefore, the attachment here in question is still in force. Subdivision 3 of section 922 (formerly subdivision
Therefore, the defendant’s motion to vacate the warrant of attachment and the levy made thereunder must be granted.
The law is clear that since the attachment and levy are void, all proceedings taken thereunder are void. Therefore, the default judgment must be vacated, since the court obtained jurisdiction only by virtue of the attachment which became void ninety days after service of the warrant and nine days before judgment was entered herein.
In view of this determination, it is unnecessary to consider in detail the defendant’s contention that no money judgment can be entered by- the court in an action in rem, and that for this additional reason the default judgment entered herein must be vacated. Suffice it to say that an action in rem will not support a judgment in personam (Kittredge v. Grannis, 244 N. Y. 182); that a judgment in rem is only enforcible against property which has been attached (McCarthy v. Culkin, 254 N. Y. 328; Civ. Prac. Act, § 520); that as long as the recitals in the judgment show that the defendant was not served personally, the judgment can only be satisfied out of the fund attached; that at most the judgment entered herein is ambiguous but not void per se, and would properly be interpreted as limited to the attached property, and that such a judgment as was entered is authorized by subdivision 2 of section 493 of the Civil Practice Act.
The defendant’s motion is in all respects granted.