Maigille v. Leonard

WILLARD BARTLETT, J.

The proof, as I understand it, •clearly establishes the fact that the defendant, after service upon him of the restraining orders in supplementary proceedings, paid •out of his bank account a sum in, excess of the amount of the fine which has been imposed upon him by the order appealed from. The court below was right, therefore, in adjudging him guilty of contempt, and in imposing that fine, if the proceedings supplementary to execution were properly instituted, and were maintainable by Frank W. Boyer, the assignee of the judgment, who is the respondent in this court. The affidavit upon which the first order in supplementary proceedings was granted was made by Mr. J. *657Stewart Ross, the attorney for the plaintiff in the action in which the judgment was obtained. In that affidavit the fact that Mr. Boyer was the owner of the judgment was not disclosed. It was subsequently made to appear, however, by the affidavits of Mr. Boyer and Mr. Ross, that Mr. Boyer was the assignee of the judgment in the action, and that the supplementary proceedings had really been instituted by Mr. Ross in behalf of Mr. Boyer, although in the name of the plaintiff. This course on the part of the assignee is sanctioned- by authority, and affords the judgment debtor no just ground of complaint. Ross v. Clussman, 3 Sandf. 676.

The proceeding to punish the defendant for contempt was brought before the court by means of a notice of motion, whereas it should have been instituted by an attachment or order to show cause, under section 2269 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Sandford v. Sand-ford, 40 Hun, 540. But this objection was not taken at the Special Term, and must therefore be deemed to have been waived. Wilson v. Greig, 12 N. Y. Wkly. Dig. 73.

The order adjudging the defendant guilty of contempt, and commanding him to pay $991.18, should be affirmed, except in one respect. The last clause provides for the commitment of the defendant unless he pays said fine, together with the fees of the sheriff of Kings county. The amount of these fees is not fixed by the order. nor are they made a part of the fine. Hence the defendant cannot be required to pay them as a condition of the nonenforcement of that portion of the order which provides for his commitment.

The order must therefore be modified by striking out from the last paragraph the words “together with the' fees of said sheriff,” and, as modified, it should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.