
    R. F. Stevens Company, Respondent, v. Henry Maus, Appellant.
    Second Department,
    February 14, 1913.
    Supplementary proceedings ■—application under Code of Civil Procedure, section 3436, for examination of judgment debtor — when granted.
    An order for the examination of a judgment debtor may be granted under section 2436 of the Code of Civil Procedure at any time after the issuing of execution and before the return thereof. The ten-year limitation provided in section 2485 does not apply.
    As such an examination is not a substitute for a creditor’s bill, the creditor need not first exhaust all his remedies at law as required before an application under section 2435.
    Appeal by the defendant, Henry Maus, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Kings County Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 30th day of November, 1912.
    
      Frederick E. Fishel, for the appellant.
    
      J. T. Cruser [Charles W. Leeman with him on the brief], for the respondent.
   JENKS, P. J.:

The judgment debtor appeals from an order of the Special Term that denies his motion to vacate an order for his examination made pursuant to section 2436 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The judgment was entered September 20, 1893, and an execution issued forthwith was returned partly satisfied on October 3, 1893. A further execution was issued on November 20, 1912, and was outstanding on November 23,1912, when the order under the said section was made.

The sole ground taken for vacation was that the right thereto was and is barred by section 2435 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We are cited to Importers & Traders’ Nat. Bank v. Quackenbush (143 N. Y. 567). That-case determined that an order authorized by section 2435 became barred after the lapse of 10 years from the date of the return of an execution, but in no way dealt directly with section 2436. But the contention of the appellant is that the reasoning of the opinion is applicable to the latter section. The Court of Appeals placed its decision upon two grounds. The first ground is that as the judgment was barred after the lapse of 20 years it was reasonable to suppose that at some time within that period the debtor was relieved from proceedings of the character in question, and that such limitation was determined by the statute itself to be 10 years, inasmuch as the statute prescribed that at any time within 10 years after the return of an execution the judgment creditor was entitled to the order. There is no analogy between the statute then considered by the Court of Appeals and the statute now under consideration, save that both are in aid of the judgment creditor. Section 2435 provides a remedy after a returned execution, and consequently arises upon the whole or partial failure of the execution. Section 2436 provides a remedy in furtherance of an outstanding execution. There is no express limitation in section 2436 like unto that of the 10 years in section 2435, save that the period of issuance is confined to any time after the issuing of execution and before the. return thereof. If the general principle enunciated by the Court of Appeals in Importers & Traders’ Nat. Bank v. Quackenbush (supra), that every such remedy must be “barred by the lapse of some definite period of time,” must be applied, to this remedy, then such principle is substantially satisfied by this provision last mentioned.

The second ground in Importers & Traders’ Nat. Bank v. Quackenbush (supra) is that proceedings supplementary to execution are remedies in equity substitutive for the creditor’s bill of chancery; that the rule that such bill could not be maintained unless the creditor had exhausted all his remedies at law or was in such a position as to make such remedies unavailable, applied to an order made under section 2435, and that, therefore, if the creditor’s judgment had ceased by lapse of time to be a lien, his remedy at law could not be exhausted and he must by some proper proceeding reinstate the lien, for otherwise the issue and return of the execution would be an idle ceremony. But I think that an order made under section 2436 is not in its nature a substitute for the former creditor’s bill. For the right to bring such a bill, aside from statutory provisions, rests upon a judgment, and in a creditor’s suit, strictly so called * * * where the creditor seeks to satisfy his judgment out of the equitable assets of the debtor which cannot be reached on execution,” generally the creditor must have an execution returned unsatisfied. (Pom, Eq. Bern. §§ 882, 88?.) As the order under section 2436 must be made while the execution is outstanding, it is auxiliary, not supplementary, to the execution, and until the return of that execution it cannot be known that the remedy at law has been exhausted. The order was issuable while an execution could be issued, and in this case there is no question as to the regularity of the execution. (Code Civ. Proc. § 13??.)

The question presented by this appeal was decided correctly at Special Term in Press Pub. Co. v. McGill (136 N. Y. Supp. 177). The order must be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.

Hirschberg, Burr, Woodward and Bioh, JJ., concurred.

Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.  