81 N.Y.S. 11 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
Lead Opinion
The action was brought to remove a cloud on the title of certain property owned by the plaintiff. On April 15,1901, the defendant obtained a judgment in the Municipal Court of the city of New York for $250.75. The summons in that action was entitled Morris Schoenfeld vs. “ Mrs. Dr. ‘ Annie ’ Maurer, first name being fictitious, real name unknown to plaintiff.” This summons was- served upon one Aurora Maurer. She appeared in the action and answered, and the plaintiff subsequently obtained a judgment. A transcript of that judgment, was filed with the county clerk on April. 15, 1901, and in that transcript the defendant was named “ Mrs. Dr. ‘ Annie’ Maurer, first name fict. real name unknown to plff.” and the judgment was docketed against this fictitious person. When this judgment was entered Aurora Maurer was the owner of certain property described in the complaint, and on the 18th day of April,
On July 16, 1901, the plaintiff in the action in the Municipal Court applied to the Special Term of the Supreme Court for an order amending the docket of this judgment. The affidavit upon which this application was made stated that the summons in the Municipal Court action was personally served upon Aurora Maurer on the 10th day of April, 1901; that she appeared generally in that action by an attorney and answered the complaint upon the merits; that at the request of the defendant the cause was adjourned to the 11th of April, 1901, and again to the 12th of April, 1901; that upon the adjourned day the defendant presented to the court a certificate of a physician'that Mrs. Aurora Maurer of 118 Chrystie street, New York city, was sick; that on the 15th day of April, 1901, the plaintiff obtained á judgment by default against the defendant for $250.75, and filed a transcript of such judgment in the office of the county clerk, which was docketed in his office and execution issued therein; that through inadvertence the clerk issued such transcript in the name stated in the summons, and not in the name given by the defendant; that such defendant thereafter made a motion in the action, and her true nanie was inserted in the moving papers, all of which are on file in the office of the clerk of the court wherein such judgment was rendered. Upon that affidavit an order of the .Special Term was entered on the 16th day of July, 1901, whereby
Subsequently upon this docket of the judgment, an execution was issued and a sale of the property of the plaintiff under that execution advertised by the sheriff; whereupon this action was commenced on the 23d of July, 190Í, to remove this record of the judgment as amended by the order of July 17,1901, as a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title and to enjoin the sale by the sheriff under the execution.
The original summons in the Municipal Court has the words “ Amended. by order to' Aurora,” inserted after the name of the defendant in the title. The attorney for the plaintiff in the Municipal Court action testified upon the trial of this action that subsequent to the fifteenth of April, when judgment was granted and the transcript filed with the county clerk, the defendant moved to open the default; that preparatory to opposing the motion he discovered that the judgment was entered against “ Mrs. D.r. Annie ” Maurer, and not against the defendant by her right name. The order to show cause why the default should not be opened was served on April 16, 1901. It does not appear upon what day the record was actually amended. The plaintiff acquired title to the property on the 18th of April, 1901.
It seems to be quite clear that this judgment as originally entered as against “ Mrs. Dr. Annie ” Maurer, the first name being fictitious, was ■ not sufficient to create any lien upon the property of Aurora Maurer. By section 1369 of the New York charter (Laws'of 1897,
It would seem that to create a lien under this provision of the statute, the name at length of the judgment debtor must be entered in the proper docket book under the initial letter of the surname of the judgment debtor, and it is only a judgment which is docketed as thus prescribed that becomes a lien upon the real property of the defendant under section 1251 of the Code. Our attention has not been called to any provision allowing an action to be commenced in the Municipal Court against a defendant whose name is unknown ; but assuming that section 2884 of the Code would be applicable to an action in the Municipal Court, the only authority there given is that the defendant may be designated in the summons, and in any other process or proceeding in the action by a fictitious name, or by so much of his name as is known. While, under that section, it
The Special Term of the Supreme Court, however, amended this •docket nunepro tuno as of the 15th day of April, 1901, by striking out -the fictitious portion of the name of the defendant and-inserting therein the name. “ Aurora Maurer,” the plaintiff’s grantor. It granted this order upon the statement of the fact that the record of the Municipal Court had been- amended by inserting the right name of the defendant, and that the transcript had been issued in the form in which it was through inadvertence of the clerk of the Municipal Court. By section 3220- of the Code, after a transcript of the judgment of the Municipal Court has been docketed in the "office of the county clerk, the judgment is deemed to be a judgment of the Supreme Court; and the Municipal Court having amended its docket so as to insert the real name of the defendant, the Supreme Court had jurisdiction to amend the docket so as to make it com form to the record in the Municipal Court, and from the- time the docket was so amended thé judgment would be "a lien upon the real
To deny the plaintiff this right to appeal to a court of equity to have .the validity of this lien determined would impose upon him the necessity of paying this judgment — a judgment for which he is not liable and which is not really a lien upon his property. Upon a sale under this execution, no owner of property could afford to run the risk for a judgment of $250 of being divested of the title to property for which he had paid upwards of $25,000; and yet if there is a sale under the execution and it should be held that the judgment was a lien, his title to the property would be gone. Upon the docket of this judgment as it stands, the judgment is a lien upon the property. The judgment having become a judgment of the Supreme Court by its docket, the Supreme Court had jurisdiction ■over it, and to entitle the plaintiff to establish that the judgment is not a lien upon the property it was necessary for him to prove that he had purchased the property prior to the time that the docket was amended and had paid a valuable consideration for it, and had received the conveyance without, no tice that the judgment was actually against his grantor.
There is no doubt of the rule that where the rights of the parties depend upon the legal construction of a written instrument, an ■action to correct the instrument or to declare it invalid, under the jurisdiction of courts of equity to remove clouds upon title, cannot
, The facts of this case bring it within the principle there applied*. Upon the record there is a judgment which is an apparent lien
All of the essential facts which, by these cases, are necessary to justify this action, appear in this case. Under the judgment the defendant issued an execution and had advertised the plaintiffs property for sale; and what the sheriff now intends to sell is all the right, title and interest of the said Aurora Maurer which she had on the 15tli day of April, 1901, or at any time thereafter in and to the property of the plaintiff. This is alleged in the complaint and admitted by the answér. The defendant, therefore, proposes under the docket of the judgment which,- upon its face, is a lien upon the property, to sell under an execution on the judgment the interest that the judgment debtor had in this property on the 15th day of-April, 1901; and a sale under that' execution, followed by a sheriff’s, deed, delivered in pursuance thereof, would, upon its face, convey the title to the property, as Aurora, Maurer was the owner of that property upon the day on which this judgment against her purports to have been entered, and a sheriff’s deed of that property under that execution wuuld be a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title.
I also think that the finding of the trial court, that the plaintiff purchased the property without knowledge or notice that the judgment docketed was intended to be against said Aurora Maurer, and that he purchased the property in good faith and in ignorance of any claim on the part of the defendant to a lien thereon, is sustained by the evidence, and that the plaintiff was entitled to the judgment awarded by. the court below.
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred; Van Beunt, P. J., and Laughlin, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The judgment, showed upon its face that it was not a lien, and hence no cloud.
J udgment affirmed, with costs.