
    The First National Bank of Canandaigua, New York, Resp’t, v. Ira E. Martin, App’lt.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term. Fifth Department,
    
    
      Filed October 19, 1888.)
    
    1. Supplementary proceedings—Practice—Code must be strictly followed—Order for judgment-debtor to surrender real estate unauthorized.
    An order was made in proceedings supplementary to execution, directing the judgment-debtor to surrender up immediately, possession of his real estate, within the state, to the receiver appointed therein. Held, that there is no authority in the Code of Oivil Procedure authorizing such an order.. That supplementary proceedings are special proceedings and are to be strictly followed.
    3. Same—Judgment creditor must exhaust remedy on execution first.
    Itids the duty of the judgment-creditor to cause the real estate of the judgment-debtor to be sold on execution, thus exhausting his remedy by execution, before resorting to proceedings supplementary to'execution, to reach real estate.
    3. Same—Judgment-creditor may be directed to convey real estate OUTSIDE OF STATE TO RECEIVER.
    When the judgment-debtor is the owner of real estate outside the state, the court having jurisdiction of the person, may compel conveyance and. thus vest title thereof in a receiver.
    4. Same—Receiver may be appointed when remedy by execution exhausted—Title to property vests in receiver—Code Civ. Pro., § 3468.
    After the judgment-creditor’s remedy by execution is exhausted, bufe not before, a receiver may be appointed, and when appointed, the property, both real and personal, of the judgment-debtor vests in him by operaation of law, and no conveyance is necessary. The receiver may dispose. of the interest in real estate as such receiver.
    
      5. Same—Judge cannot order judgment-debtor to surrender real estate—Code Orv. Pro., § 3447.
    Code Civil Procedure. § 3447, does not authorize a judge in supplementary proceedings to direct the judgment-debtor to deliver up_the possession of his real property. The direction to be given under said execution is limited to money or other personal property.
    Appeal from two orders of the county judge of Ontario county, made in proceedings supplementary to an execution, one directing the conveyance and delivery of real property to a receiver of the defendant, and the other adjudging him in contempt for refusing to obey such order.
    
      Spencer Gooding, for app’lt; J. Henry Metcalf, for resp’t.
   Haight, J.

The defendant was the owner of a farm consisting of one hundred and fifteen acres, situate in the town of Gorham, Ontario county, N. Y., and also of a house and lot in the village of Canandaigua, in the same county. On the 17th day of March, 1888, the farm was sold by the sheriff of Ontario county, on two executions in favor of Lyman A. Brown, against the defendant, and was bid off by M. B. Munger, for the amount of the executions, with costs and expenses of sale, and the sheriff’s certificate of sale was issued to Munger. Prior thereto, and on the 13th day of February, 1888, the defendant, at the suggestion and upon the advice of Munger, conveyed the farm by quit-claim deed to one Charles W. Curtiss, for the purpose of securing him as an indorser upon the promissory note of the defendant; and on the nineteenth day of March thereafter, Curtiss and wife conveyed by quit-claim deed the farm to Munger, who was the plaintiff’s president and managing officer. Upon the 19th day of November, 1887, the plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant for 1131.90 damages and costs; and on the 20th day of March, 1888, an execution was issued thereon to the sheriff of Ontario county, which was returned unsatisfied. Thereafter, an order was obtained from the county judge of Ontario county in proceedings supplementary to execution for the examination of the defendant, and such proceedings were had thereon that H„ C. Bemen was subsequently appointed a receiver of the defendant’s property, and the defendant was directed to convey the farm, and house and lot to such receiver, and to deliver up to him immediate possession thereof. The defendant having refused to execute such conveyance or to deliver possession, the county judge made an order on the 23d day of May, 1888, adjudging him in contempt for disobeying the order directing him to make conveyance, and to deliver up possession, and punished him for such contempt by imposing a fine and providing that he be imprisoned until he complied with the order. This appeal was taken from both of the last named orders.

These orders, we think, ought not to stand. In the first place, the proceedings instituted are supplementary to the execution, and are not intended to take the place of, or to-be a substitute for the execution.

The judgment is a lien upon the house and lot in the village of Canandaigua which has not been sold. The plaintiff has the right to sell these premises upon the execution, and until it has exhausted its remedy by execution, these proceedings are not available. If the plaintiff should be permitted to procure the appointment of a receiver and thus vest the title of the real estate of the judgment debtor in such receiver, it could be sold and the judgment debtor deprived of the right of redemption which is given to him in case of a sale by execution. It was the duty therefore of the plaintiff to have caused the house and lot to be sold on execution, thus exhausting its remedy by execution, before resorting to these proceedings. This is not a case where the real estate is located in another state and cannot be reached by execution. The Albany City National Bank v. Gaynor, 67 Howard, 421; Bunn v. Daly, 24 Hun, 526.

But so much of the order as appoints a receiver is not appealed from, and consequently that portion of the order is not before us for review; only so much of the order as-directed the defendant to make conveyance of his real estate and to deliver up possession thereof to the receiver is appealed from. After the remedy by execution is exhausted a receiver may be appointed, and when appointed the property, both real and personal of the judgment debtor is vested in him; Code of Civil Procedure, § 2468.

It vests in him by operation of law and no conveyance is-necessary. Tinkey v. Langdon, 13 N. Y., Weekly Digest, 384.

The receiver obtains such title as the statute gives him and he is entitled to no other.

A judgment debtor may be the owner of real estate outside of the state not subject to our statutes or the jurisdiction of our courts. In such cases the courts having jurisdiction of the person may compel conveyance and thus vest the-title in a receiver. But such interests in real estate as is-within the state vests in the receiver without conveyance and may be disposed of by him as such.

The order, as we have seen, also directs the defendant to surrender up immediate possession to the receiver of his real estate. Supplementary proceedings are special proceedings, and are to be strictly followed, and we are unable to-find any authority in the Code authorizing this part of the order.

Section 2447, provides that “where it appears from the examination or testimony taken in a special proceeding authorized by this article that the judgment-debtor has in his possession, or under his control, money or other personal ¡property belonging to him. * * * The judge, by whom the order or warrant was granted, or to whom it is returnable, may, in his discretion, and upon such notice given to such person as he deems just or without notice, make an order directing the judgment-debtor * * * immediately to pay the money or to deliver the articles of personal property * * * to the receiver.” Nothing, however, herein contained authorizes the judge to direct him to deliver up the possession of his real property. It will be observed that the direction is limited to money or other personal property, thus indicating that it was not the legislative intent to make these proceedings a substitute for the action of ejectment. This question was disposed of by this court in the case of Smith v. Tozer (3 N. Y. State Rep., 363), in which it was held that the power of the judge to order the delivery of property to the receiver under the Code of Civil Procedure, was limited to the personal property of the judgment-debtor.

It was contended, on the part of the respondent, that as to the one hundred and fifteen acre farm, the defendant was in possession, and mat it had the right to recover such possession in order to obtain the rents, issues and profits that would accrue from it during the fifteen months after its sale on execution; and the case of Farnham v. Campbell (10 Paige’s Chr., 598), is relied upon as furnishing - such authority.

That case holds that a judgment creditor, by filing a creditor’s bill after the return of an execution unsatisfied, obtains a hen upon the rents and profits of the real estate of his judgment debtor, which accrued during the fifteen months allowed by law to redeem the premises from a sale by the sheriff upon execution, and that satisfaction of the judgment may be decreed out of such rents and profits. It is not necessary for us to here criticise or even dissent from this doctrine, although it has been questioned in the case of Dow v. Platner, 16 N. Y., 562-565. If the farm was rented during the fifteen monts allowed for redemption, it is quite possible that the receiver could reach such rents. If crops were grown that were subject to levy by execution, it is possible that they could be levied upon and sold, but this is a special proceeding and is not a creditor’s bill prosecuted in a court of equity, and we do not understand that the judgment debtor could, by an order of the judge in these proceedings, be ousted of possession. Section 1440 provides that the right and title of the judgment debtor, sold by virtue of an execution, is not divested by the sale until the expiration of the period within which it could be redeemed, and section 1441 provides that the person entitled to the possession of real property sold by virtue of an execution, may, during the period of redemption, use and enjoy the same. Without here considering the power of a ■court, there is no provision which authorizes an order for the delivery to a receiver of the possession of real property by an order of a judge in these proceedings. Smith v. Tozer (supra).

As to the house and lot, it appears that it is occupied by a tenant. It does not appear that the defendant has the power to oust the tenant and surrender up possession, and he should not be ordered to do that which it is not in his power to do.

For these reasons the orders appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.

Barker, P. J., and Bradley, J., concur; Dwight, J., in result.  