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Forrest v. Price

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 18, 1894
52 N.J. Eq. 16 (Ch. Div. 1894)

Summary

In Forrest v. Price, 52 N. J. Eq. 16, 29 A. 215, this court says it is no excuse for contempt of an order of the court that the order is founded on error of law or fact; that the error must be questioned by direct proceedings to review the order, not by disobedience; but the contemner of an order of the court may show, in defense, that the court was without jurisdiction to make the order disobeyed, and hence that there was, in legal effect, no order.

Summary of this case from Oddo v. Saibin

Opinion

05-18-1894

FORREST v. PRICE.

Mr. Cortlandt and R. Wayne Parker, for complainant Joseph D. Bedle, for defendant.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Bill by Anna M. Forrest, administratrix of Samuel Forrest, deceased, against Rodman M. Price. On motion to punish said Price for contempt in disobeying an order of the court. Motion granted.

The bill in this cause was filed in June, 1874, in aid of an unsatisfied judgment, recovered June 2, 1857, by Samuel Forrest, deceased, against Rodman M. Price, of the county of Bergen, in the supreme court of this state, for $17,000, debt, and $78.04, costs of suit. No property, out of which the judgment could be satisfied, was then discovered, and the suit was suffered to lie dormant until the 8th of August, 1892, when the complainant, by her petition, represented that an alias writ of fieri facias upon the judgment had been returned unsatisfied on the 4th of August, 1892; that the judgment remained wholly unpaid; that $45,000 was about to be paid the defendant from the United States treasury, in virtue of an act of congress in his behalf passed; and that he did not intend to apply such moneys towards the satisfaction of her judgment. The petition prayed that an injunction might issue to restrain the defendant from collecting those moneys for his own use, and that a receiver might be appointed, to whom the moneys might be transferred by the defendant. Upon the presentation of the petition, an order was made on the 8th of August, 1892, which required the defendant to show cause before the chancellor on the 12th of September, then next, why an injunction should not issue, and a receiver be appointed, according to the prayer of the petition, in which was incorporated this restraining clause: "And that in the mean while the said Rodman M. Price be, and he hereby is, enjoined and restrained from making any indorsement of any draft or other negotiable or other paper or security which shall be made or delivered to him by the United States of America, or any officer of the treasury department thereof, or which shall in any wise come to his possession or control from it or such officer, mediately or immediately, and which shall be expressed to be paid to his order; and from transferring, assigning, delivering, or in any way passing the said draft or paper or security, or the right thereto, or to any money to be derived therefrom or thereby, to any person whatever, except under the order of this court." Upon the return of the order to show cause the defendant appeared by counsel, and, at his instance, adjournment of the hearing was had, with leave to take depositions, the restraining clause of the order being continued in force. After service upon him of the order to show cause, and while its restraint remained in force, the defendant received four drafts from the United States treasury department, respectively, for $20,000, $13,500, $9,000, and $2,704.08, aggregating in amount $45,204.08, and on the 5th day of September, in the same year, in the city of Washington, indorsed the drafts for $13,500, and $2,704.08, and handed the former of them to his attorneys there, and drew the money upon the latter of them for his own use. On the 3d of October in the same year, during an adjournment of the hearing of the order to show cause, which he had obtained after appearing and filing an answer to the petition of the complainant, in the city of New York, he indorsed the two remaining drafts, and drew the moneys ordered by them to be paid. By order made on the 10th of October, 1892, the chancellor, not having yet been apprised of the indorsement and collection of the drafts, appointed a receiver of the property and things in action belonging or due to the defendant, Price, and directed the defendant to indorse and transfer to the receiver the drafts in question. The drafts having been previously disposed of, the direction of this order was, of course, not complied with.

Upon the defendant's action being duly represented to the chancellor, on the 18th of October, an attachment was issued against him as for contempt of court. He left the state of New Jersey, and was not served with the writ until July, 1893. Later, he was examined upon interrogatories in the matter of contempt, and in that examination admitted, among other things, that the order to show cause had been served upon him; that he had read it, and handed it to his counsel; that afterwards, on the 5th of September, 1892, in the city of Washington, he received from the assistant treasurer of the United States the four drafts already referred to, his claim having been allowed, and a warrant having been duly drawn for them, each of which drafts was payable "to the order of Rodman M. Price, late purser U. S. N.," and receipted for them; that on the same day he indorsed the draft for $2,704.08, "Rodman M. Price, late purser U. S. N.," and received the money therefor; that on the same day he indorsed the draft for $13,500, and delivered it to his attorneys in Washington in payment for services which they had rendered him in and about procuring the money from the government; and that on the 3d of October, following, he indorsed the two remaining drafts in the city of New York, and received the moneys forthem. He admits that his disregard of the restraining order was deliberate, and essays to excuse it in his answer to the thirteenth interrogatory. To that interrogatory, he, among other things, replies: "And this defendant, in further answering in regard to his claim against the United States government herein referred to, saith that congress passed an act for the relief of Rodman M. Price, which was approved by the president February 23, 1891, and of which the following is a copy: 'An act for the relief of Rodman M. Price. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America in congress assembled; that the secretary of the treasury of the United States be and he is hereby, authorized and directed to adjust upon principles of equity and justice, the accounts of Rodman M. Price, late purser of the United States navy and acting navy agent at San Francisco, California, crediting him with the sum paid over to and receipted for by his successor, A. M. Van Nostrand, acting purser, January fourteen, eighteen hundred and fifty, and pay to said Rodman M. Price, or his heirs, out of any money in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated any sum that may be found due to him upon such adjustment Approved February 23, 1891,'—and under which the secretary of the treasury did cause to be adjusted, upon principles of equity and justice, the accounts of defendant, as late officer, to wit, a purser, in the navy of the United States." Then, after stating at length the account as adjusted, by which it appears that the balance due to him was §76,204.08, he continues: "That about the 6th of December, 1848, this defendant was assigned to duty as purser and fiscal agent of the government for the navy department of the United States. On the 1st of January, 1850, he was relieved from duty, and ordered to report to the secretary of the navy, in Washington, D. C.J that, in pursuance of said order of recall, he turned over the public moneys and property to his successor on or about December 31, 1849, and on January 14, 1850, advanced to his successor, from his private funds, the sum of $75,000, to be disbursed by his successor for the benefit of the United States. Thus a controversy arose as to whether the government of the United States was responsible for private funds which had been turned over to its officer." He then referred to an opinion of the Hon. Caleb Cushing, attorney general of the United States, dated March 12, 1854, 6 Op. Atty. Gen. U. S. 357, in which is quoted a letter from the secretary of the navy to the defendant, instructing him concerning special duties then required of him, among which was the procurement of funds for use at the station to which he was sent, by bills drawn upon the navy department in Washington, and in which the attorney general states that Van Nostrand, who succeeded the defendant as purser, had been the defendant's clerk, and was lawfully appointed his successor by the commodore commanding at the California station, and also that the defendant, with another, became security to the government, in a bond in the penal sum of $30,000, conditioned for Van Nostrand's faithful performance of his duties as such purser. It appears in the case, further, that Van Nostrand afterwards converted to his own use, not only government moneys, but also the $75,000 which the defendant had placed in his hands. The opinion of the attorney general concludes with the determination that, as the defendant's advance of his private funds to his successor was unauthorized by the government, it could not be charged against the United States. After the rendition of the opinion the accounts of the defendant remained unadjusted until after the approval of the act of 1891, when, in obedience to that act, the advance of $75,000 to Van Nostrand for the use of the government was credited him, and in August, 1892, the balance in his favor was ascertained to be, and allowed at, $76,204.08, or $1,204.08 more than the $75,000 advanced. This excess appears to have been made up by allowances for mileage. Of the balance thus found, $30,000, or thereabouts, has been withheld, to answer the defendant's liability on Van Nostrand's bond, and the remainder, $45,204.08, has been paid, as aforesaid, by the four drafts.

To properly understand the position now taken by the defendant, it is necessary to call attention to the 3477th section of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which is in this language: "Ail transfers and assignments made of any claim upon the United States, or of any part or share thereof, or interest therein, whether absolute or conditional, and whatever may be the consideration therefor, and all powers of attorney, orders, or other authorities for receiving payment of any such claim, or any part or share thereof, shall be absolutely null and void, unless they are freely made and executed in the presence of at least two attesting witnesses, after the allowance of such a claim, the ascertainment of the amount due, and the issuing of a warrant for the payment thereof. Such transfers, assignments, and powers of attorney, must recite the warrant for payment, and must be acknowledged by the person making them, before an officer having authority to take acknowledgments of deeds, and shall be certified by the officer; and it must appear by the certificate that the officer, at the time of the acknowledgment, read and fully explained the transfer, assignment, or warrant of attorney to the person acknowledging the same." Continuing his answer to the thirteenth interrogatory, the defendant says: "This defendant further saith that believing he was entitled personally to receive, under the terms of said act of February 23, 1891,the money appropriated for his relief, and that it was his right and duty to assist in adjusting and closing his accounts according to the requirements of the government, and believing that it was not within the province or jurisdiction of the honorable chancellor of the state of New Jersey to intervene, or divert from its proper channel money appropriated by the act of congress, if so intended, or to interfere between the adjustment of the accounts of this defendant, as late officer of the United States navy, with the government of the United States, and the payment, and without any intention of disrespect to the chancellor, this defendant did indorse his name and rank upon said drafts, being payable to Rodman M. Price, late purser in the United States navy, upon the back of said several drafts, as hereinbefore stated, which this defendant believed he had a right to do, and which, this defendant most respectfully submits, was not within the jurisdiction of the honorable chancellor of the state of New Jersey to restrain or prohibit him from doing. That, unless said indorsement was made, inconvenience and annoyance and impediments would have been drawn in the way of the fiscal operations of the United States," etc. After the interrogatories were answered, the United States government having abandoned the prosecution of Van Nostrand's bond, and the defendant, Price, having applied for payment of the moneys withheld to answer any recovery that might be had on the bond, the chancellor, after hearing the parties, on the 21st of December, 1893, made further order that the defendant Price do forthwith make and deliver to the secretary of the treasury of the United States his written consent and request that the sum remaining unpaid to him be paid to the receiver, and, among other rights and properties, to assign such receiver all his right, title, and interest in those moneys. This order the defendant also refuses to obey, and in justification of such refusal offers the record of a proceeding instituted by the receiver appointed herein, in the supreme court of the District of Columbia, to aid him in reaching the $30,000 remaining in the United States treasury, by which it appears that the receiver has obtained an injunction in that court against him, which forbids him from assigning any warrants or drafts for the whole or part of said moneys. Motion is now made to punish the defendant for contempt in his disobedience of the three orders of the court above specified, to wit, the order of August 8, 1892, which forbade the indorsement of the four drafts, the order of October 10, 1892, which directed the transfer of the drafts to the receiver, and the order of December 21, 1893, which required the defendant to request and consent to the payment of the $30,000 to the receiver, and to assign those moneys to the receiver.

Mr. Cortlandt and R. Wayne Parker, for complainant Joseph D. Bedle, for defendant.

McGILL, Ch. (after stating the facts). The proceeding in which the orders contemned were made is designed to quickly discover and secure assets of a judgment debtor, which cannot be reached by execution, and, among them, moneys due to the judgment debtor from another or others. When it is made to appear that there are such moneys, the statute expressly authorizes the court of chancery to restrain the debtor from transferring them, and to require him to assign and deliver them to a receiver. Revision, p. 121. It is not controverted that when the court took action in the present matter, by the orders in question, the defendant, Price, had become entitled to moneys from the United States government. The act of congress had established his claim, and the proper accounting officers had ascertained it. It remained only for the defendant to receipt for the moneys, and obtain possession of them. They were, in substance, his property. Goreley v. Butler, 147 Mass. 8, 10, 16 N. E. 734, affirmed by the United States supreme court 146 U. S. 303, 13 Sup. Ct. 84. It was after the sum due to defendant was ascertained that the court, by its order, forbade the defendant to indorse or transfer any drafts that might be delivered to him in payment of his property, and to assign to its receiver all moneys that remained undrawn from the United States treasury. It is no excuse, in a proceeding for contempt, that the orders contemned are erroneous in law. The method of correcting such error is by appeal not by disobedience. When a person is proceeded against for disobedience to an order or judgment, he cannot allege in defense that the court erred in that order or judgment. To be successful, he must go further, and make out that there was, in legal effect, no order, by showing that the court had no right to judge between the parties upon the subject. People v. Sturtevant, 9 N. Y. 263, 266; Una v. Dodd, 39 N. J. Eq. 173, 180, on appeal 40 N. J. Eq. 672, 706, 5 Atl. 155. Recognizing this well-established principle, the defendant denies the jurisdiction of the court to make the orders here in question, upon three grounds: First, because the fund is a governmental bounty to him, designed for his personal maintenance and comfort, and therefore is not liable to application to the satisfaction of the judgment of the complainant, however meritorious it may be; second, because the restraint of the indorsement of the governmental drafts tended to interfere with and delay the fiscal operations of the government; and, third, because the assignment of the moneys to a receiver, as contemplated by the orders of October 10, 1892, and December 21, 1893, would contravene the letter and policy of the lawenacted in the 3477th section of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and be a nullity.

In Munday v. Vail, 34 N. J. Law, 418, 422, Chief Justice Beasley defined "jurisdiction" to be the right to adjudicate the subject-matter in a given case, to constitute which it is essential that the court must have cognizance of the class of cases to which the one adjudged belongs; that the proper parties shall be before the court; and that the point decided must, in substance and effect, be within the issue made by the pleadings. Testing the present case by the definition thus given, we first ascertain that its subject-matter is the application of the defendant's established and ascertained property, in possession of the United States, to the satisfaction of the complainant's judgment. That this court has cognizance of this class of cases is not disputed. The defendant is regularly before the court, and the points to be decided are clearly within the issues presented by the pleadings. To urge that the particular money in question is exempt from the application desired is to present a defense upon the merits of the case; and to object that the temporary restraint of the indorsement of drafts will hinder and delay the fiscal operations of the United States is to offer a reason why the court should not continue its temporary restraint. And so the insistment that, under the section of the United States Revised Statutes which has been referred to, the assignment to a receiver would be a nullity, may be a reason why the court should not order it to be made. None of these matters, however, go to the court's jurisdiction. They are defenses, properly belonging in the cause which the court has power to adjudicate upon. If the court err in that adjudication, the remedy is by appeal. Confusion is avoided by bearing in mind that this suit is not a proceeding against the United States, nor directly against a fund in its possession, but a proceeding in personam, against the defendant, Price. But, assuming that the contentions of the defendant properly question the court's jurisdiction, let us examine their merits:

No tenable ground, upon which the first can be rested has been suggested in behalf of the defendant. His connection with the United States navy was severed some 40 or more years ago. It does not appear that he now owes the government any duty, for which this fund is designed to maintain him. The case bears no resemblance to the unearned half-pay of a retired officer, which is protected because of the service he may be called upon to render. Schwenk v. Wyckoff, 46 N. J. Eq. 560, 20 Atl. 259. I apprehend that a claim actually established, so that it now is property of the claimant, even though it spring from pure bounty, is not, in absence of express legislative provision to the contrary, exempt from the claimant's debts. The act for the relief of the defendant does not intimate that the provision it makes is a sacred bounty. But it appears that the money, of which the statute authorizes payment, though not a legal claim, is not pure governmental bounty. The provision in the act for the relief of the defendant, Price, that payment should be made to him "or his heirs," has been urged as indicative of the legislative intention, that the payment was not intended to benefit creditors. I do not so understand the act. The expression, "or his heirs," was undoubtedly a provision against his death before the day of payment; and there can be no substantial doubt that it is used in the sense of personal representatives, the thing dealt being personalty, and appears in the act to secure the moneys to his estate in the event of his death before they are paid. The direction of the statute is to credit the defendant with a sum of money which he, many years ago, loaned to an officer and agent of the government for the use of the United States, and which that officer received, in his official capacity, for the purposes of the government. That officer was the successor of the defendant, in a mission in which the defendant had been specially charged with the duty of going into a new and unsettled country, at a time when the inhabitants, as history records, had become mad in speculations, to establish a credit for the government The method of establishing that credit, it is true, was prescribed, but it was difficult to literally follow the requirements of the prescription. Exigencies demanded that moneys should be had. Of necessity, the government officials, 5,000 miles, in course of usual travel, from home, were obliged to exercise some discretion. It was in this situation that the defendant, Price, advanced to his successor $75,000 of his private moneys for the use of the United States. The receipt of such a loan for the government was beyond the scope of that successor's authority, and, the moneys never having in fact been applied to the use of the government, the receipt of them was not ratified or recognized, and hence the defendant was subjected to a loss. After many years, congress reviewed the transaction, and, recognizing in it a moral obligation upon the United States, directed that credit be made to the defendant for the amount of his advance. The environments of the whole situation when the loan to Van Nostrand was made evinced to congress an appropriateness in the transaction, and admitted of the advance being made in good faith for the benefit and convenience of the United States. That it was made in good faith does not appear to have been doubted. The congressional proceedings show that it was upon consideration of these facts that the burden of the loss, without interest, was thrown, by congress, upon the public treasury. The statute was designed to restore to the defendant his property, which, in good faith, he had intrusted to an officer of the UnitedStates for the benefit of his principal. I do not find in this situation even the bounty of a grateful government, partaking of the character of a pension or reward for a meritorious deed, but simply the restitution of property which had once belonged to the defendant, as assets for the liquidation of his pecuniary obligations; and I fail to understand how, upon its restoration to the defendant, it can be held to assume a new character.

Upon the second insistment, it is not perceived how the restraint of the indorsements of any drafts which should be delivered to the defendant pending the return day of the order to show cause, dated August 8, 1892, would have materially interfered with the fiscal operations of the government. The restraint operated upon the defendant, not upon the government. It substantially forbade him to draw the money upon the drafts, leaving the government to pursue such course, in the event of his failure to draw, that its regulations or practice permitted. Besides, the restraint was limited to a short day, when the defendant would be heard upon the question whether a receiver should be appointed. That delay, in point of fact, proved to be exactly one week from the delivery of the drafts. It has not been suggested how such a delay could operate prejudicially to the public service. I am not referred to any law, rules, regulations, or policy of the governmental departments which show that such a delay, or kindred delays, can so operate. That it did not infringe governmental regulations amply appears by the fact that two of the four drafts were not indorsed and presented by the defendant for payment until the 3d of October, and were then paid, so far as appears, without objection. It is unnecessary, under this state of facts, to discuss the question whether this court would have power to make an order which would directly or indirectly inconvenience and impede the fiscal operations of the United States. The order in question does not appear to have been of that character.

The third insistment of the defendant, that an assignment of moneys in the United States treasury, as directed by the orders of October 10, 1892, and December 21, 1893, to the receiver, would contravene the policy of the law of the United States, and that, therefore, the orders were not within the jurisdiction of this court, remains to be considered. Upon this insistment the greatest stress has been laid. It is to be observed that the section of the Revised Statutes which is referred to declares that all assignments of claims upon the United States shall be absolutely null and void unless they are freely made after the allowance of the claim, the ascertainment of the amount due, and the issuance of a warrant for its payment. This section was taken from a statute of 1853, which was entitled "An act to prevent frauds upon the treasury of the United States." The purpose of congress, in its enactment, inferentially, was to protect the government from the necessity of dealing with those who were not directly and originally concerned in the claim; that is, with strangers to it, whose numbers, and possibly merely speculative interests in it, might embarrass its speedy and just allowance or denial. Spofford v. Kirk, 97 U. S. 484; Goodman v. Niblack, 102 U. S. 556; Bailey v. U. S., 109 U. S. 432, 3 Sup. Ct. 272; Trust Co. v. Shepherd, 127 U. S. 494, 8 Sup. Ct. 1250. Viewed in the light of a protection to the government, it has been held that the statute is not to be interpreted according to the literal acceptation of the words it uses. In the case of Erwin v. U. S., 97 U. S. 392, it was ruled that the statute applied to cases of voluntary assignments of demands against the government, and did not embrace cases where the title was transferred by operation of law, such as the passing of claims to heirs, devisees, or assignees in bankruptcy; and upon the same reasoning, in Goodman v. Niblack, supra, it was adjudged that it did not extend to a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors, and in Bailey v. U. S., supra, it was held that the officers of the government might safely pay according to an unrevoked power of attorney, if they saw fit to do so. So a partnership agreement to carry out a governmental contract, held by one of the partners, which subjected the moneys earned from the government under the contract to the rights of other partners, was not regarded as within the policy of the act. Hobbs v. McLean, 117 U. S. 567, 6 Sup. Ct. 870. It is not perceived that the assignment and consent to payment to the receiver, in the present case, differ in principle from an assignment to an assignee in bankruptcy, or to an assignee under a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors. The reason underlying the adjudication which excludes those cases from the operation of the statute is stated by Mr. Justice Miller, in Goodman v. Niblack, in this language: "That there can be no purpose, in such cases, to harass the government by multiplying the number of persons with whom it has to deal, nor any danger of enlisting improper influences in advocacy of the claim. That in such cases the exigencies of the party who held the claim justified and required the transfer that was made." This reasoning is not a whit less pertinent in its application to the present receivership than in its application to either of the assignees adjudicated upon. The receiver here is actuated, in the performance of his trust, by the identical motives and desires which actuate assignees in bankruptcy, and under voluntary assignments for creditors. I am therefore of opinion that the assignment which was required from the defendant, Price, was not within the inhibition of the United States, law. In reviewing the disobedience of the defendant,I am strongly impressed that the objections now interposed are mere subterfuges urged to secure his escape from punishment for a deliberate defiance of the court's authority. It is remembered that when the order of August 8, 1892, forbidding the indorsement of drafts, was first served upon the defendant, the drafts were not in his possession, and that, with the plain command of that order before him, he went to Washington, and there obtained the drafts, and upon the same day, although it was only a week before the time fixed for hearing in this court, he deliberately indorsed two of the drafts. Then, holding the two remaining drafts until after he had procured an adjournment of the hearing upon the order to show cause, upon terms which continued the restraint upon him, he indorsed those two remaining drafts, obtained the money upon them, and departed from the state, so that the court's process could not be served upon him, and practically remained without the reach of that process for fully nine months. Furthermore, after he was served with the writ of attachment, and examined upon interrogatories, he refused to assign to the receiver, or to consent to the receiver's having, the moneys remaining in the United States treasury. These circumstances, with other surroundings of his disobedience, convince me that his intention was not to surrender his moneys to the court's receiver, and if, in carrying out that intention, it was necessary to disobey the court's order, he would do so. Such intention, carried into effect, is, without question, a punishable contempt. State v. Trumbull, 4 N. J. Law, 158; Fraas v. Barlement 25 N. J. Eq. 84; Dodd v. Una, 40 N. J. Eq. 672, 719, 5 Atl. 155. The exercise of the court's power to punish has a twofold aspect: First, the proper punishment of the guilty party for his disrespect of the court or its order; and, second, to compel performance of some act or duty required of him by the court, which he refuses to perform. In re Chiles, 22 Wall. 157; Stimpson v. Putnam, 41 Vt. 238. In the former case, the court, having regard to the gravity of the offense, must itself determine the nature and extent of the punishment; and, in the latter case, the party refusing to obey should be fined and imprisoned until he performs the acts required of him, or shows that it is not in his power to do so. Our chancery act (Revision, p. 123, § 103) is in harmony with this general principle. It provides that, where a person shall be adjudged to be in contempt, before he is released or discharged he shall pay to the clerk in chancery, for the use of the state, a sum not exceeding $50, as a fine for the contempt, and, being in court, on process of contempt or otherwise, shall stand committed, and remain in close custody, until the court's order shall be obeyed, and until the fine imposed, with the costs, be fully paid. By infraction of the court's order of August 8, 1892, the defendant has possessed himself of $31,704.08 in moneys. It is within his power to make amends for his disobedience, to the extent of paying those moneys to the receiver appointed herein. It is also within his power to obey the order of December 21, 1893, but I assume it is not within his power to restore the draft for $13,500, or the moneys which it called for. I do not forget the injunction of the supreme court of the District of Columbia. It does not forbid the defendant to request the United States authorities to pay the moneys to the receiver, and to assent to such payment. Such an act may be of great value to the receiver, for it will fully protect the treasury officials (Bailey v. U. S., supra); and, when the object of the injunction is considered, it is conspicuous that its intent and meaning are not to prevent an assignment to the receiver, but, on the contrary, to protect him from assignments which may render it impossible for him hereafter to secure the money.

I will make this disposition of this matter: I will fine the defendant, Rodman M. Price, for his contempt, the sum of $50, to be paid to the clerk in chancery for the use of the state, and will order him to pay the $31,704.08 above mentioned within five days from the service upon him of a copy of the order or decree hereon, and order that unless the fine be paid to the clerk, and the said moneys be paid to the receiver, and the directions of the order of December 21, 1893, be specifically complied with, and the costs of these proceedings in contempt be paid within five days from the service of such order, the defendant shall be committed to the common jail of the county of Bergen, there to remain in close custody until he shall make said payments and comply with said order of the 21st of December, 1893, unless the court shall deem it proper, for good reason shown, to sooner discharge him.


Summaries of

Forrest v. Price

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 18, 1894
52 N.J. Eq. 16 (Ch. Div. 1894)

In Forrest v. Price, 52 N. J. Eq. 16, 29 A. 215, this court says it is no excuse for contempt of an order of the court that the order is founded on error of law or fact; that the error must be questioned by direct proceedings to review the order, not by disobedience; but the contemner of an order of the court may show, in defense, that the court was without jurisdiction to make the order disobeyed, and hence that there was, in legal effect, no order.

Summary of this case from Oddo v. Saibin
Case details for

Forrest v. Price

Case Details

Full title:FORREST v. PRICE.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: May 18, 1894

Citations

52 N.J. Eq. 16 (Ch. Div. 1894)
52 N.J. Eq. 16

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