—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Charles Ramos, J.), entered March 29, 2002, which denied defendants’ motion to vacate a default judgment, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, the disposition of the motion vacated, and the matter remanded for further proceedings including a traverse hearing.
On its motion to vacate the default judgment obtained by plaintiff in this action for breach of a consulting agreement between Florida and Israeli corporations, defendants denied personal service by claiming that defendant Strikovski was at a meeting in Brooklyn with third parties at the time when plaintiff’s process server claimed to have served him in Manhattan. The process server’s allegations of service are disputed on numerous points, posing a clear dispute of facts which could only properly be resolved by a traverse hearing. This was more than a “[m]ere denial” of service (see De La Barrera v Handler,
While this matter must be remanded on the threshold issue of personal service, we also note that defendants made an adequate showing of a potentially meritorious defense, specifically with regard to a termination notice (claimed by plaintiff to have been fabricated or, alternatively, to have been ineffectual by the terms of the consulting agreement) based on asserted illegality of the consulting agreement under federal securities laws (see 17 CFR 239.16b). If the traverse hearing is resolved
