Tbe affidavit presented to the county judge stated that the plaintiff had recovered a judgment against the defendant in a Justicesr Court, and had caused a transcript to be filed and an execution to be issued, which had been returned partly unsatisfied. The affidavit specified the amount for which the judgment was rendered, but did' not state what amount remained unsatisfied. The appellant’s counsel contends that by reason of that omission the affidavit was insufficient to give the judge jurisdiction. We think otherwise. The statement of the amount for which the judgment was rendered was enough to give jurisdiction under sections 2435 and 2448 of the Code.
Put, although the judge had jurisdiction, it seems to us that the omission to state the amount remaining unpaid was an irregularity which furnished good ground for the defendant’s motion to set aside the order. It is not enough to aver, in the words of the statute, that the execution was returned “ partly unsatisfied,” the amount remaining unsatisfied should be specified. The amount may be SO' small that, if it were stated, it would be unjust and oppressive to institute the proceeding. De minimis non curat lex. A statement of the amount is necessary to enable the court to make an order under section 2446 (if there should be occasion for it), permitting payment to a sheriff of a sum “ not exceeding the sum which will satisfy the execution.” Such an order, which merely followed the words of the statute just now quoted, and did not specify the sum needed to satisfy the execution, would be irregular for its vagueness and uncertainty.
The order of the County Court not only denied the defendant’s motion with costs, but turned his own motion against him, by directing him to appear at a subsequent day before the referee and be examined. No motion appears to have been made to that effect by the plaintiff on notice. We are inclined to the opinion that the County Court had not jurisdiction to entertain a motion for such relief, either with or without notice. Jurisdiction to make an order requiring a debtor to appear before a referee and be examined in sup*77plementary proceedings, is given by tbe Code to a, judge, and not to any court. (Sec. 2434.) This was an order de novo, of that nature. The original order had spent its force. It had been made more than a month previously, and the day fixed by it had passed, and there had been no examination before the referee, although the defendant had duly appeared for that purpose. The day had passed without the ■examination, because the referee was not present. There was no way, then, of getting the defendant before the referee except by a new order requiring him to appear, and that could only be made by a judge. The order appealed from does not purport to have been made by the county judge, but is a court order. It is not a modification of the original order, such as is authorized by section 2433 of fhe Code, as it was not made on motion, and is an original order.
For these reasons we think the order appealed from should be reversed in all respects, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs and disbursements!
Barker, Haight and Bradley, JJ., concurred.Order reversed and motion granted, with costs and disbursements.