Van Wagonen v. . Terpenning
Van Wagonen v. . Terpenning
Opinion of the Court
This action was commenced in January, 1883, to recover for the alleged conversion by the defendant of a quantity of personal property. The finding of the referee that the alleged cause of action accrued in April or May, 1875, was warranted by the evidence, and his conclusion that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover must be sustained unless the operation of the Statute of Limitations, in its application to the plaintiff’s cause of action, was suspended for some and sufficient time to relieve it from that defense. And that is dependent upon the effect of a' temporary injunction order made and served upon the plaintiff in June, 1874, in an action brought by Margaret VanWagonen, the wife of the plaintiff, against him for a separation, and by which he was enjoined from disposing of or in any manner interfering with her personal property; and the property mentioned in the complaint in this action was within the restraining terms of the injunction. The property was then upon premises the legal title to which was in the plaintiff’s wife, and upon which the defendant had a mortgage made by her and her husband. The mortgage was foreclosed and the premises purchased by the defendant on sale pursuant to the decree of foreclosure. By virtue of a writ of assistance in March, 1875, the plaintiff was removed from the premises, and the defendant entered into the possession of diem. The property in question was then there. The complaint in the wife’s action was dismissed, and the injunction dissolved in April, 1881. The inquiry is whether until then, the commencement of an action against the defendant for the cause herein alleged, was stayed within the meaning of the statute, which provided that “ When the commencement of an action shall be stayed by injunction or statutory prohibition, the time of the continuance of the injunction or prohibition shall not be part of the time limited *226 for the commencement of the action.” (Code, § 105.) The present Code is substantially the same. (§ 406.) It must, for the purposes of this review, be assumed that the plaintiff had such possession of or proprietary right in the personal property mentioned in the complaint, as to enable him to maintain an action against the defendant for the alleged conversion, which arose shortly after the defendant went into the possession of the realty upon Avhich it then was. The interference with the property by the plaintiff enjoined by the injunction Avas that which might result to. the prejudice of his wife. The protection of it against the acts of others Avas not denied to him by it. His right Avas to retain the possession of it, and to use such means as he might deem necessary to maintain it, and to take care of or preserve the property. If taken from him Avithout right or authority he might maintain an action to recover it. The injunction in terms did not restrain him from bringing an action having relation to the property, and his mere act of doing so to recover for its conversion Avould not constitute any interference Avitli it, nor Avould the recovery of a judgment have that effect, although the payment or collection of the judgment would operate to transfer the property to. the party .against Avliom such recovery .was had.. The commencement of the action would, therefore, have been one step on the way toAvard the consummation of that which might in laAv operate as a disposition of the property. But' at the same time it Avould be done by Avay of protection of the interest of the OAvner against the unlawful interference with it by a stranger to any right in the property, and so far it would be consistent Avitli the interest of the party at whose instance the injunction Avas granted. And if such party could not be prejudiced by it, the defendant Avas not restrained any further than the injunction, as reasonably interpreted, by its terms enjoined his action. (Parker v. Wakeman, 10 Paige, 485; Hudson v. Plets, 11 id. 180.) The defendant Avas a stranger to the injunction and entitled to the benefit of the Statute of Limitations as a defense, unless the plaintiff was by it denied, *227 lurin”g its continuance, the right within the meaning of the tatute before mentioned to c'ommence the action. And in uch case, as was said by Judge Akdbews in Wilkinson v. First National Fire Ins. Co. (72 N. Y. 499), an injunction irder will not be construed to restrain acts not injurious to he rights of the party in whose behalf it is obtained, and nucli less those which are beneficial to him, unless the words slearly have that import or effect. • A party enjoined from nterfering with or disposing of property in his possession, lould not, -without violation of such mandate, consent or volmtarily permit it to be taken, by one having no right to do so, :rom his custody; and, on the other hand, any attempt he night make in good faith to reclaim the possession of the property, or to protect his legal right as owner or bailee, would lot be the interference with it, prohibited by such injunction, in the present, ease the property was in the possession of the plaintiff, and during the pendency of the injunction it was, as nust here be assumed, wrongfully appropriated by the defend-mt to his own use, in violation of. the rights of the plaintiff, whether as owner or bailee is not important. The latter was it liberty to assert his right to maintain such relation, as igainst the defendant, to the property and seek by action, so :ar as practicable, to enforce it; and for the purpose of restoraion of its equivalent, may have resorted to an action of trespass or in trover. This is one of the rights incident to the' mstody of a bailee as long as the right of custody continues, rad is entirely consistent with those of the bailor during that ;ime; and it may be exercised by. the former to render the pailment effectual for the protection of the beneficial owner. Fhe plaintiff was not, by the terms of the injunction, enjoined from doing this for the benefit of the one, either himself or iis -wife, who was in fact the owner of the property.
The ease is distinguishable in principle from those cited by he plaintiff’s counsel. In Finche v. Funke (25 Hun, 616), he cause for which the action was brought did not arise from my wrongful act of the defendant during the continuance of the injunction, in violation of any right of the plaintiff, or *228 which the latter was at liberty to challenge; but that actio was brought to recover a debt due the firm, of which th plaintiff was survivor, while he was subject to an injunctio restraining him from “ interfering with or collecting any o the assets or property of his firm.” And in Stubbs v. Ripl (39 Hun, 626), the same may preliminarily be said. Tlrer the injunction enjoined the plaintiffs to refrain from convey iug, incumbering, or in any manner interfering with or dis posing of certain real estate; and during its operation, th action was brought for the alleged purpose of settling th rights of the parties to it in a portion of such real estate, an< to obtain an accounting of the rents and profits, the determine tion of which action as there held, would have resulted in definite disposition of the rents and profits of the property and may to that extent have defeated somewhat the beneficia purpose of the action in which the injunction order was made It may be observed that in both of those cases the situation existing when the restraint was created, remained unchanged and the purpose of the actions was, and the effect of thei: prosecution to determination would have been, a substantia disturbance of such situation, and, therefore, an interference with it, while in the present case, the cause of action arose ou of the violation of the right of the plaintiff while the in june tion was operative, and the action would, if then brought a¡ now, apparently have been for the protection of the rights oi the person beneficially concerned and in aid of the purpose, oi the injunction rather than otherwise.
It was so held in McQueen v. Babcock (41 Barb. 337; 3 Keyes, 428; 3 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 129), and the distinction between that case and this one is, that there the plaintiff was an assignee for the benefit of creditors of his assignor. His relation was that of trustee, and the action was brought to protect the rights of any parties who should eventually be entitled to the property wrongfully taken from his custody. The injunction operated on him there as it did on the plaintiff here, and the purpose of it in both actions was the same. The custody of the plaintiffs in both actions must be deemed to have been *229 qually lawful, and recognized as such until determined to ave been otherwise. The purpose of the action in which the 1 junction in that case was obtained, w'as to set aside the assigníent, and it was upon the theory that the plaintiff there, as gainst the creditors prosecuting it, was not trustee by reason f the invalidity for fraud of the trust, which the assignor ought to create. And the reason which existed for the contraction and effect given to the injunction there, is applicable o the one under consideration. These views lead to the confusion that the commencement of the action was not stayed >y the injunction, and that as the consequence, in view of the act found by the referee, the plaintiff’s right of action against he defendant was barred by the Statute of Limitations at the ime it was commenced.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.