204 A.D. 759 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
This appeal raises the question as to whether section 443 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides for the service of a summons and complaint without the State without an order for such service, authorizes such service where an attachment has been granted upon the property of the defendant. Section 443 provides for the service without the State without an order in cases specified in section 438, subdivision 5. When section 443 was enacted, said subdivision 5 did not contain the provision authorizing the service of a summons by publication where a warrant of attachment had been granted in the action and had been levied upon the property of the defendant within the State. This provision was added to subdivision 5 of section 438 by the Laws of 1920 (Chap. 478).
It is a well-settled rule of interpretation of statutes that where a statute expressly or by necessary implication adopts another, that statute must be deemed to -have incorporated the statute adopted ipsissimis verbis, and future additions to or modifications of the latter are not included in the adoption, unless a contrary' intention is clearly manifested. This rule of law was cited in Carling v. Purcell (3 Misc. Rep. 55) and authorities cited. In Sutherland on Statutory Construction (Vol. 2, p. 787) the law is stated to be as follows: “ Where one statute adopts the principal provisions of another by a specific and descriptive reference to the statute or provisions adopted, the effect is the same as though the statute or provisions adopted had been incorporated bodily into the adopting statute. * * * Such adoption takes the statute as it exists at the time of adoption and does not include subsequent additions or modifications of the statute so taken, unless it does so by expressed intent.” (See, also, Endlich Interp. Stat. § 492; Knapp v. City of Brooklyn, 97 N. Y. 520; Matter of Main Street, Sing Sing, 98 id. 454; People v. Damron, 160 App. Div. 424.) In fact, this rule of interpretation is so well recognized that I have been able to find no cases whatever in which an exception has been made thereto.
The only remaining question is as to whether there is anywhere an expression of a legislative intent that a summons in an action
This conclusion is further fortified by the provisions of section 235 of the Civil Practice Act. The amendment to subdivision 5 of section 438 was enacted in 1920. The very next year the Civil Practice Act became a law. The Civil Practice Act is deemed to be largely interpretative of the provisions of the Code which are enacted therein. Under that section it is provided for service without the State without an order only in the case “ Where the complaint demands judgment that the defendant be excluded from a vested or contingent interest in or lien upon specific real or personal property within the State or that such an interest or lien in favor of either party be enforced, regulated, defined or limited, or otherwise affecting the title to such property.”
This was the exact provision of subdivision 5 of section 438 before the amendment of 1920. There is no provision under the Civil Practice Act for the service of a summons without the State without an order in case of an attachment levied within the State. This would seem to me a legislative interpretation of the effect of subdivision 3 of section 443, as limiting the scope of that part of the statute to subdivision 5 of section 438 as it existed at the time that section 443 was enacted; and this is in strict accordance with the rule of statutory construction which has been heretofore cited. Section 905 of the Civil Practice Act is a further indication of the interpretation put upon the law as it theretofore existed. That section provides that personal service must be made within
I conclude, therefore, that the order refusing to set aside the judgment was erroneous and should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion therefor should be granted, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., and Finch, J., concur; Dowling, J., dissents.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.