33 N.Y.S. 1 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
On the 20th day of March, 1895, Alexander Gulick was appointed by this court as receiver of the co-partnership assets of the firm of Frankel & Lansing, in an action brought by the plaintiff, who was the special partner in said firm, the general partners being the defendants above named. The receiver in question gave the bond of $30,000 required in the order, which was approved by a justice of this court, and has been duly filed. Immediately upon his appointment he entered into possession of the copartnership property, consisting of the Clarendon Hotel in the city of Brooklyn which was held under lease by said copartnership, and was being run by tlife defendants.
The complaint sets forth the copartnership relation, and also various acts of bad management, at least, on the part of the defendants, the utter insolvency of the firm, its indebtedness in an amount exceeding $173,000, and that under the most favorable conditions its property would not be sufficient to pay fifty cents on the dollar. The prayer of the complaint is that the limited partnership be dissolved, an account taken in respect to the business; that the property of the firm be sold, and the partnership debts and liabilities paid off, and that a receiver be appointed pending the action and after judgment. Affidavits were presented in support of the complaint, showing that a large proportion of the creditors con
On the twenty-fifth of March two attachments were sued out against the firm, one by Peter J. Montague and the other by Benoit Wasserman, which were granted by Mr. Justice Bbowx in the city of Brooklyn, on the ground that the defendants had assigned, disposed of and secreted their property with intent/to cheat and defraud their creditors, Montague and Wasserman claiming to be creditors of the partnership. At the same time that the warrants of attachment were signed, Mr. Justice Brown made an order, based upon the same papers upon which the attachments had been granted, by which he required the receiver “ to forthwith allow the sheriff of the county of Kings to forthwith levy the said warrants of attachment upon the goods, chattels and property of the said Dionis Frankel and Edward B. Lansing in the possession or under the control of the said receiver.” This order was not a court order, nor was it made upon any notice to the receiver or to any of the parties to the action in which the receiver was appointed; and the first intimation which the receiver had of its existence was when the sheriff presented himself at the hotel, took possession and ousted him from his receivership. If this ex parte order is to stand, the whole object for which the receiver was appointed by this court will have been defeated, the receivership, in effect, will be dissolved, and any judgment which may be recovered in the action will be a barren one. It is impossible that such a proceeding as this should be sanctioned in any court of equity. It is contrary to reason and fundamental principles of justice.
If orders of this kind may be granted without notice, a new and extremely convenient method of dissolving receiverships and depriving a court of equity of property which it has taken into the custody of the law, through its duly appointed officer, has been discovered by the learned counsel for the attaching creditors. But it is unnecessary to enter upon any extended argument for the purpose of showing the impropriety of the practice which has been adopted by the attaching creditors in this case; the thing speaks for itself. If the creditors who have sued out these attachments considered that it was their right to have them levied upon the copartnership property, notwithstanding the receivership, they should have applied to this court on proper papers for the relief which they sought, and after notice to the receiver and the parties to the action, when the question raised could have been properly considered and the matter appropriately disposed of. The course adopted, however, is utterly inconsistent with anything like orderly procedure in the administration of justice, and calls for a prompt and unqualified reversal. The attorney for the attaching creditors, in meeting the motion made to vacate the ex
The attorney for the attaching creditors appeals to the case of Webster v. Lawrence, 47 Hun, 565, in support of his right to make the levy in question. The facts in that case, however, are widely different from those before me. In that case a general assignment for the benefit of creditors was made by the firm of II. Webster & Co. Subsequently, Horace Webster, one of said firm, brought an action to obtain a partnership dissolution and accounting, and obtained the appointment of a temporary receiver. The action was based on an allegation that the general assignment was fraudulent. A creditor sued' out an attachment against the firm, and sought to levy on the property which had passed from the assignees into the hands of the receiver, and his claim to make the levy in question was based upon the contention that the general assignment was fraudulent as against creditors. It is plain, therefore, that the ultimate success of the attaching creditor depended upon his ability to establish the voidness of the general assignment; and as the receiver was appointed in an action between the copartners, brought for the purpose of testing the validity of the assignment, the rights of the attaching creditor, which could attach only in case the general assignment was void, would naturally be superior to the claims of the receiver The question in the case arose on a motion, on notice, on the part of the attaching creditor, made
In the case at bar, although the attaching creditors have made some pretense of claim that the action is a collusive one, the evidence before me utterly fails to substantiate it, and the reason for granting the leave to levy which existed in the case of Webster v. Lawrence, namely, that the attaching creditor should have the right to test the title to the property in the manner provided by law, finds no counterpart in this case. I do not consider, therefore, that that case is any authority for the granting of the application now made for leave to levy on the property in the hands of the receiver. If the attaching creditors in this case fear that proceedings may be taken in the action, such as a discontinuance or any other course that would be prejudicial to them as creditors, they are at liberty to move to be made parties to the action, when the question as to the propriety of admitting them will be determined by the court in their favor if the facts presented by them are found to justify the exercise of the discretion of the court in that regard; and if the receivership should be dissolved, and the property restored to the copartners, the court would doubtless adjudge that the attaching creditors had a lien or charge upon the fund by virtue of the issuing of the attachments in question, which would be suitably provided for before the property was returned to the copartners. Of course, upon the facts of the case presented to me, it is exceedingly improbable that there will be any such outcome of this litigation;
For the reasons which I have stated, the motion to vacate the order made by Mr. Justice Brown should be granted, with costs, the levy made thereunder by the sheriff of Kings county set aside, and the sheriff directed to restore the property in question to the receiver.
The motions made by the attorney for the attaching creditors to confirm said order are denied, with costs.
Ordered accordingly.