11 Misc. 2d 492 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1956
This is a motion pursuant to section 799 of the Civil Practice Act to vacate so much of a third-party subpoena, served upon the City of New York by the judgment creditor herein, as stays the payment by the City of New York of certain funds to the moving parties.
The application results from the following state of facts: On or about December 10, 1953 the judgment debtor, hereinafter referred to as Met, entered into a written contract with the City of New York to do certain school construction work for the price of $675,000. Pursuant to the provisions of that agreement the moving parties (surety companies) issued on behalf of Met joint payment and performance bonds in the penal sum of $675,000 conditioned upon Met’s faithful performance of the terms and conditions of its contract with the city and the payment of persons supplying labor and materials in connection with such contract. By reason of financial difficulties Met found itself unable to pay certain suppliers of labor and materials and notified the moving parties of that circumstance, requesting them to pay those obligations. For
The judgment creditor recovered a judgment in the sum of $4,706.45 against Met on June 4, 1956, said amount being due for unpaid premiums on workmen’s compensation and public liability insurance policies. On June 6, 1956 the judgment creditor served the city with a third-party subpoena as a result of which the city has been prohibited from paying over to the moving parties a $7,500 warrant already drawn to their order pursuant to the aforesaid assignment from Met to the sureties.
The sureties ask that the part of the said subpoena prohibiting the payment of the warrant be vacated, in substance, upon the following grounds:
(1) The judgment creditor has no claim to the moneys in question because it' does not belong to the judgment debtor, having been assigned to them prior to entry of judgment.
(2) The interest of the judgment creditor is subordinate and inferior to that of the mechanics’ liens duly assigned to the sureties.
(3) The subrogation claim of the sureties to the fund involved is superior to any claim the judgment creditor may have to the money.
In opposition the judgment creditor contends:
(1) The sureties cannot prevail as assignees of the judgment debtor (Met) since they advanced no moneys to the latter.
(2) The only remedy of the sureties is to foreclose the mechanics ’ liens they hold.
(3) The sureties cannot prevail as subrogees for the reason that the judgment creditor’s claim arose out of the job for which the money was to be paid.
The Court of Appeals of this State has held that in this type of case, under the principle of subrogation, the surety’s rights are prior to those of claimants in the position of the judgment creditor (United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Triborough Bridge Auth., 297 N. Y. 31; Scarsdale Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co., 264 N. Y. 159; also, see,
Under the principles there laid down I am of the opinion that the sureties’ rights in this case are clearly prior and superior to those of the judgment creditor since the equitable lien of the moving parties arose on December 10, 1953 when the bonds issued by them were executed whereas the judgment which is the basis of the third-party subpoena under attack was not entered until June 4, 1956.
I am also satisfied that the rights created by the -contractor’s assignment to the sureties were sufficient to bar the judgment creditor from any claim against the moneys due to be paid by the city under its contract. It is elementary that a judgment creditor can have no greater rights to the property involved than those owned by the judgment debtor at the time of the commencement of supplementary proceedings. (Matter of Eisenberg v. Mercer Hicks Corp., 199 Misc. 52.) The assignment herein created an equitable ownership in the sureties as to the fund payable for the construction work to be done by the contractor. Under such circumstances, as between the parties, the fund in equity passes immediately to the assignee,
It further appears that within the purview of the Lien Law the judgment of the judgment creditor is not lienable, since it was not based upon the performance of labor or the furnishing of materials for construction. For that reason the rights of the sureties, arising from the mechanics’ liens of which they are the assignees, having paid the claims of the subcontractors for the labor and materials upon which the same are based, are prior to those of the judgment creditor, certainly to the extent of the amount paid out to the owners of the mechanics’ liens, which far exceeds the $7,500 held subject to the third-party subpoena. (See Corbin-Kellogg Agency v. Tasker, 248 App. Div. 58.)
In the light of the foregoing the fund in question is not subject to the judgment upon which the subpoena in question was issued and the motion is therefore granted. Settle order.