2 N.E. 47 | NY | 1885
The order here assailed, in its amended form, permits the Albany and Rensselaer Iron and Steel Company to prosecute its action against the Construction Company to final judgment, and to enforce that judgment upon any property attached before the appointment of the receiver in this State, and forbids only any other interference with the assets of the construction company. Its sole effect, as against the appellant, is to prevent a seizure under process, issued in its action, of assets already seized by the court, and held as well for the appellant's benefit as for that of the other creditors. It operates to prevent the Iron and Steel Company from attaching or levying upon, for its own sole benefit, property already attached and levied upon by an equitable process for the benefit *402 of all the creditors alike. It preserves every right and lien acquired before the appointment of the receiver by the attachment creditor, and the privilege and power of enforcing them; and so raises merely the question whether the tribunal which appoints a receiver may, in aid of that appointment, forbid any after interference by way of levy or seizure with the property in his possession. Both parties concede that the possession of the court must not be invaded; that its officer cannot be sued without its permission; and that he cannot be dispossessed except at the peril of a contempt. What then must needs be the effect of the order in this case? It commands nothing which was not already commanded; it forbids nothing which otherwise was permissible; it takes away no right or remedy which the appointment of the receiver had not already taken away. Its sole practical effect was to give notice of that appointment and the rights secured by it, and charge the specific creditor with a conscious and wilful contempt if he assailed the possession of the court. The order served was but a brief transcript of the order entered in the action appointing the ancillary receiver, for that vested in him the assets of the Construction Company and forbade not only the officers and agents of the defendant, but "all other persons" from interfering with his possession of the assets. The power of the court to make that order, in a case where it had jurisdiction to appoint the receiver as a necessary incident of that appointment, cannot be successfully disputed; and certainly it would seem strange if the power should be lost in the process of bringing that order to the notice of a specific creditor so as to insure his obedience to it.
The provisions of the Code in respect to injunctions do not apply to the case. In one sense, every order of a court which commands or forbids is an injunction. But an injunction proper is a recognized provisional remedy, and the rules of the Code apply to it as such. The order here is not of that character. It is like the one discussed in Attorney-General v. Guardian Mut.Ins. Co. (
The power existing, its exercise rested in the discretion of the court and so cannot be reviewed here; and the further objection, that upon the complaint in the action for a receiver no ultimate relief can be granted, is one which ought not to be disposed of upon this motion. The courts below have sustained the sufficiency of the complaint, and it is not at all certain that they are in error. If they are, the question may more wisely be reserved to an occasion which involves it directly and necessarily.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed.