In 1971, Thomas DeVivo obtained a default judgment against Vincent Sordillo in the Nassau County District Court in the amount of $3,320.60. The default judgment was docketed in the Nassau County Clerk’s office in January 1972, and execution thereon was made by the Nassau County Sheriff who, on December 11, 1981, sold Vincent Sordillo’s interest in the property at public auction to the plaintiff Benjamin Travitsky for $4,650. Travitsky thereafter conveyed the one-half interest in the Bellmore property to himself and to the plaintiff Milton Berlin as tenants in common. The two plaintiffs were thus co-owners of the property with the defendant Rose Sordillo.
In 1986 the plaintiffs commenced the instant action in Supreme Court, Nassau County, seeking, inter alia, partition of the Bellmore property. They alleged that Rose Sordillo had been collecting rents from the property but that she had failed to remit to the plaintiffs their share thereof. Rose Sordillo denied the allegations of the complaint and the matter was referred to a referee to hear and report. After extended proceedings the referee issued a report, inter alia, recommending that the Bellmore property be sold to effectuate the partition.
While the partition action was pending before the referee, Vincent Sordillo moved before the Nassau County District Court, Second District to vacate the 1971 default judgment against him by Thomas DeVivo. A hearing on the issue of proper service was held before District Court Judge Geoffrey O’Connell who, on May 25, 1989, granted the motion based on the uncontroverted testimony of Vincent Sordillo that he had never been served with a summons and complaint in the action. Judge O’Connell was expressly told by counsel for Mr. Sordillo, that the movant’s interest in the property had been sold at a sheriff’s sale.
The plaintiffs opposed Vincent Sordillo’s intervention motion on numerous grounds. Relevant to the issues raised on this appeal, the plaintiffs argued that they should have been given notice of the motion before the District Court to vacate the default judgment as their property rights were affected thereby. Had they been given notice, the plaintiffs alleged, they could have defended against the motion to vacate by showing the District Court that Vincent Sordillo had perjured himself and that he was guilty of laches.
The Supreme Court was not persuaded by the plaintiffs’ arguments. It granted Vincent Sordillo’s motion to intervene, and determined that because the default judgment had been obtained without personal jurisdiction over Vincent Sordillo, it was void. The District Court’s vacatur thereof rendered the sheriff’s deed similarly void. Therefore, the court directed the plaintiffs to submit proof of their acquisition costs and legal expenses relevant to the partition action and once Vincent Sordillo paid these amounts "to make them whole”, the sheriff’s deed would be vacated. The plaintiffs now appeal.
It is well settled that a court is without power to render a judgment against a party over whom the court lacks jurisdiction. A judgment rendered without jurisdiction is void (see, Royal Zenith Corp. v Continental Ins. Co.,
The plaintiffs nevertheless contend that they should have been given notice of Vincent Sordillo’s application before the District Court because they could have defended against vacatur by showing that Vincent Sordillo was guilty of perjury and laches.
This court’s decision in Roosevelt Hardware v Green (
Clearly Roosevelt Hardware has no applicability to this case where the default judgment was not vacated on consent, but rather was vacated by the court that had issued it on the ground that it was jurisdictionally defective when it was obtained. Accordingly, laches would not bar the vacatur of the void default judgment at bar.
However, with regard to the plaintiffs’ perjury claim we find that the plaintiffs should not be divested of their interest in the subject property without first having an opportunity to contest Vincent Sordillo’s claims that he was not served with process in the District Court action which resulted in the default judgment. It is clear that the object of Vincent Sordillo’s legal actions was the recovery of his property interest in the Bellmore property. At the time of Vincent Sordillo’s motion to vacate the 1971 default judgment, the District Court was aware that the property had been sold at a sheriff’s sale and the record further suggests that Vincent Sordillo may have been less than forthright in his representations before the District Court. Had the plaintiffs been afforded an opportunity to cross examine Vincent Sordillo at the hearing in the
Clearly the plaintiffs, as the current owners of the property Vincent Sordillo was trying to recover, were "[p]ersons who ought to be parties if complete relief is to be accorded between the persons who are parties to the action or who might be inequitably affected by a judgment” (CPLR 1001 [a]). The plaintiffs would thus appear to fall within the statutory definition of necessary parties (see, Galbraith v Guida,
