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Twelfth Ward Bank v. Hamilton

Supreme Court, Appellate Term
Mar 1, 1908
58 Misc. 173 (N.Y. App. Term 1908)

Opinion

March, 1908.

Katz Sommerich, for appellant.

Respondent filing no brief.


To support the exemption of earnings from application to the payment of a judgment, under section 2463 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it must appear "that those earnings are necessary for the use of a family, wholly or partly supported" by the judgment debtor's labor. Here the matter of necessity was sought to be established by nothing beyond the inference to be drawn from the fact that the debtor's monthly salary was $233.33 and that he maintained a home for a wife and two children, who were dependent upon him, in the city of New York. This, in our view, was not enough to justify the exemption; and there was, apparently, no question as to the fact that, on November first (the date of the third party order), the debtor's salary for the month of October was due and payable. Matter of Trustees, etc. v. Harsha, 22 Misc. Rep. 645. It may well be that, upon the submission of further proof as to the details of the debtor's necessary expenditures for his family, the exemption can be thoroughly justified; but, upon these papers, the order made is without support.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs, without prejudice to the merits of a new application upon further proof.

Present: GILDERSLEEVE, BISCHOFF and MacLEAN, JJ.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs, without prejudice to merits of a new application upon further proof.


Summaries of

Twelfth Ward Bank v. Hamilton

Supreme Court, Appellate Term
Mar 1, 1908
58 Misc. 173 (N.Y. App. Term 1908)
Case details for

Twelfth Ward Bank v. Hamilton

Case Details

Full title:THE TWELFTH WARD BANK, Judgment Creditor, Appellant, v . FRANK C…

Court:Supreme Court, Appellate Term

Date published: Mar 1, 1908

Citations

58 Misc. 173 (N.Y. App. Term 1908)
109 N.Y.S. 21