Case Name: Alfred L. Hecht, Plaintiff, v. Harry A. Sanger, Defendant
Court: New York City Court
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1926-03-19
Citations: 126 Misc. 735
Docket Number: 
Parties: Alfred L. Hecht, Plaintiff, v. Harry A. Sanger, Defendant.
Judges: 
Reporter: New York Miscellaneous Reports
Volume: 126
Pages: 735–738

Head Matter:
Alfred L. Hecht, Plaintiff, v. Harry A. Sanger, Defendant.
City Court of New York,
March 19, 1926.
Meyer Marlow, for the plaintiff.
No appearance for the defendant.

Opinion:
La Fetra, J.
An order in proceedings supplementary to an execution was granted which directed the debtor to appear for examination as to his property. Although served, he failed to appear, and an order to show cause issued to punish him as for a contempt. Upon his default the attachment followed. The debtor was arrested and arraigned before me when the aforesaid motion was made. The proceedings were predicated upon a judgment in favor of the creditor and against the debtor obtained in the Municipal Court, Borough of Manhattan, Third District, and an execution and a return thereto unsatisfied by a marshal of the court. The moving affidavits further disclose that the debtor resided :n and had a place for the regular transaction of business in person in the county of New York.
The execution upon the return of which the proceedings supplementary to execution herein were based was issued to the marshal pursuant to section 135, subdivision 1, of the Municipal Court Code, which authorizes an execution upon a money judgment to be directed to a marshal to collect the amount thereof out of the personal property of the debtor.
Judgment creditors in a Municipal Court action, by virtue of sections 135 and 151 of the Municipal Code, are now afforded an opportunity to collect their judgments by execution out of the personal property of the debtor in any county within the territorial limits of Greater New York. This is a legal remedy, entirely distinct from the practice before the jurisdiction of the Municipal Courts was extended throughout Greater New York, now comprising five separate counties. Prior thereto the marshal's process was limited to the county wherein he was appointed and the return of an execution by him unsatisfied was insufficient to support an application for the examination of any judgment debtor. The execution to the marshal did not exhaust the legal remedies of the creditor as against the debtor's property, either real or personal. In order to do so it was necessary to file a transcript of' the judgment in the county of either the residence or place of business of the debtor and to issue the execution to the sheriff of the county against all the property of the debtor, except such as was exempt. Upon the return of the sheriff, showing the execution, wholly or partly unsatisfied, and other jurisdictional facts, the proceeding was maintainable. The filing of the transcript created a hen upon both the real and personal property of the debtor in the county, to the extent of the judgment, which could be satisfied in whole or in part by either a levy upon and sale of the personal property or the sale of the debtor's real estate under well-considered statutes. Such proceedings were either supplementary to or in aid of the execution to the sheriff after an endeavor to compel the creditor to exhaust his legal remedies. In their essential features they were substitutes for the former creditor's bill in equity and it was well settled that they could not be utilized until the creditor had pursued them to every available extent before resorting to the more drastic quasi-equitable remedy.
In the case of Importers & Traders' National Bank of N. Y. v. Quackenbush (143 N. Y. 567, 571-573), cited with approval in Matter of Maltbie v. Lobsitz Mills Co. (223 id. 227, 234), the court, O'Brien, J., clearly points out the equitable character of the proceedings, as well as the requirements as to the execution to the sheriff. (See, also, First National Bank of Canandaigua v. Martin, 49 Hun, 571, 573; Moyer v. Moyer, 7 App. Div. 523, 531.)
Statutes relating to executions and proceedings supplementary thereto or in aid thereof must be construed so as to give force and effect whenever possible to each and every one of them. (Moyer v. Moyer, supra.)
This motion strikes at the very root of the amendments to section 775, subdivision 4 (Laws of 1922, chap. 550), and the last sentence of section 778 of the Civil Practice Act (Laws of 1923, chap. 384), relating to these proceedings. Subdivision 4 reads as follows:
" 4. If the judgment was recovered in the Municipal Court of the City of New York, to a city marshal pursuant to sections one hundred and thirty and one hundred and thirty-five of the New York City Municipal Court Code," and the last sentence of section 778, as follows: " Where the judgment upon which the execution was issued was recovered in a Municipal Court of the City of New York, either special proceeding shall be instituted before a justice of the City Court of the City of New York or before the county judge of the county in which such Municipal Court district is located."
Did the Legislature intend to require the Municipal Court judg ment creditors to exhaust their legal rights by way of execution to a marshal against the personal property of the debtor in the five counties of New York, in addition to filing a transcript in the proper county and issuing the requisite execution to the sheriff before the order for the examination of the debtor, or did it intend to give a preference to such judgment creditors over those of other courts and allow the examination simply upon the return of a marshal's execution? To hold the latter would repeal by implication many of the sections of article 45 in its application to such judgments and would seem to be class legislation. To answer the former in the affirmative will clarify and harmonize the amendments with the article and the decisions of our courts of long standing construing the same.
I accordingly find that before an order is allowable for the examination of a Municipal Court judgment debtor it must appear, in addition to the usual jurisdictional facts required to support an examination based upon judgments of other courts, that an execution was duly issued upon the judgment and returned wholly or partly unsatisfied by a marshal of the Municipal Court.
The affidavit upon which the original examination was ordered failed to disclose sufficient facts to maintain the order. All proceedings subsequent to the return of the marshal to the execution are void. The motion is granted and the prisoner is discharged. Submit order.