
    William L. Conyngham, App’lt, v. John Duffy, Resp’t.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed January 13, 1891.)
    
    1. Limitation— Supplementary pbocbedings1.
    The limitation applicable to an order for the examination of a judgment debtor in supplementary proceedings is ten years from the return of an execution unsatisfied, even though the right accrued before the Code of Civil Procedure was enacted which changed the time from twenty years to ten.
    2. Same.
    The old limitation was preserved only where it was invoked before the expiration of two.years from the effectual enactment of the new Code.
    Appeal from judgment and order of the supreme court, general term, second department, reversing order of special term.
    
      Abbott Brothers, for app’lt; S. S. Marshall, for resp’t.
    
      
       Affirming 52 Hun, 615, mem.
      
    
   Finch, J.

It has been determined by the court below that the limitation applicable to an order for the examination of a judgment debtor in supplementary proceedings is ten years from the. return of an execution unsatisfied, even though the right accrued before the Code of Civil Procedure was enacted. Under the Code of Procedure the limitation was twenty years, § 292, and while that was in force, and in October, 1875, ‘judgment was obtained against the defendant and execution issued, which was in due season returned unsatisfied. In July, 1888, an order was granted by the county judge of Westchester county for the examination of the judgment debtor, more than twelve years having elapsed since the return of the execution unsatisfied. A motion to vacate' the order was made and denied by the county judge, whose order' was reversed on appeal by the general term, and from that decision the creditor appeals to this court.

Since the Code of Civil Procedure has changed the limitation to ten years, and was in force when the order was granted, § 2435, it became the only existing limitation and the one to be observed,, unless the older one of twenty years, under which the right accrued, has been in some manner preserved. Acker v. Acker, 81 N. Y., 143. That is the creditor’s contention and he relies upon § 3352 of the present Code. That provides that none of its provisions, other than those in chap. 4, shall render ineffectual any right or limitation lawfully accrued at an earlier period. This section preserves to the creditor the twenty years’ limitation, unless the new limitation is contained in or given by the terms of chap. 4, and that becomes the final question.

The appellant contends that chapter fourth prescribes no limitation for the granting of such an order, and has nothing to with supplementary proceedings; that their limitation is fixed by chapter 17, and that depending upon the terms of that chapter, they fall within the protection of § 3352. It has been said in the supreme court that chapter 4 has no application to supplementary proceedings, Bean v. Tonnelle, 24 Hun, 354, and our attention is called to the explicit declaration of § 414 of that chapter making its provisions inapplicable to “a case where a different limitation is specially prescribed by law.”

But I am unable to see that a different limitation is prescribed. By § 388 of chapter 4, ten years is fixed as the limitation in all cases not specially prescribed in the first two titles, and while the chapter speaks of actions and the time at which the causes of action accrue, the latter sections, 414, 415, include special proceedings and the accruing of rights to institute the same. And hence it follows that by chapter four a limitation for the institution of summary proceedings is fixed at ten years from the accruing of the right.

Section 2435, in a later chapter, fixes the same limitation and not a “ different ” one, and since it is not different, it fails to exclude supplementary proceedings from the operation of chapter four, and so the further provision of § 414 applies, as I think was the legislative intention, which preserves the old limitation only where it is invoked before the expiration of two years from the effectual enactment of the new Code. This order, therefore, not made until after the expiration of such two years, lost the benefit of the repealed limitation, and was governed by the new one of ten years.

The order of the general term should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  