MEMORANDUM
Indоmar, Ltd. (“Indomar”), a Bahamian corporation, moves pursuant to Rule
I.
East Asiatic began its action against Indomar by process of maritime attachment levied against $16,883.76 of defendant’s assets located within the Southern District of New York. Since the unification of admiralty and civil procedure,
see
Order of Supreme Court of United States,
East Asiatic overlooks this rule, however, and in substance contends that use of the maritime attachment process under Supplemental Rule B does not preclude the simultaneous assertion of pure in personam jurisdiction over defendant. Thus, East Asiatic alleges thаt this Court had in
In admiralty, as in civil lаw, the court’s direct in personam jurisdiction over defendant depends upon the latter’s contacts with the forum and the correct service of process.
Ivanhoe Trading Co. v. M/S Bornholm,
Unification of admiralty and civil procedure has done nothing to distort this basic principle, although East Asiatic apparently interрrets the Notes of Advisory Committee on Supplemental Rule B (“Advisory Notes”) as permitting the simultaneous acquisition of in personam jurisdiction by conventional process and by maritime attachment. This Court does not agree. The text in question reads as follows:
“A change in the context of the practice is brought about by Rule 4(f), which will enable summons to be served throughout thе state instead of, as heretofore, only within the district. The Advisory Committee considered whether the rule on attachment and garnishment should be correspondingly changed to permit those remedies only when the defendant cannot be found within the state and concluded that the remedy should not be so limited.
“The effect is to enlarge the class of cases in which the plaintiff may proceed by attachment or garnishment although jurisdiction of the person may be independently obtained. This is possible at the present time where, for example, a corporate defendant has appointed an agent within the district to accept service of process but is not carrying on activities there sufficient to subjeсt it to jurisdiction ... or where, though the foreign corporation’s activities in the district are sufficient to subject it personally to the jurisdiction, there is in the district no officer on whom process can be served.” (Citations omitted).
The enlargement of which the Advisory Notes speak refers to a situation which prevailed prior to the unification of admiralty and civil procedure in 1966. At that time an admiralty defendant doing sufficient business in the district but subject to service only beyond its borders, although within the state, could be subjected to the in personam jurisdiction of the court solely through process of maritime attachment. This class of defendants is now amenable to traditional in personam jurisdiction through the statewide service permitted by Rulе 4(f). However, the Advisory Notes make it plain that these defendants remain vulnerable to attachment, and thus a plaintiff may proceed against them either by Rule 4(f) process or by maritime attachment. At the same time, Supplemental Rule B continues to permit attachment by a plaintiff proceeding against a foreign corporation which, although “prеsent” in the district through its activities, can be reached for service only through extraterritorial process under Rule 4(e) or 4(i). In other words, the Advisory Notes recognize that attachment continues to be an option in certain cases where pure in personam jurisdiction might be alternatively achieved over the same defendants. But plaintiff cannot cоmpel the defendant’s appearance through Rule 4 and, at the same time, attach its property through Supplemental Rule B. Compelling defendant’s appearance through extra-district process obviates the need to compel that appearance through maritime attachment. This Court cannot conclude that in widening a clаss of cases in which plaintiff may choose his approach, the Advisory Committee intended to undermine the venerable jurisdictional rationale of maritime attachment.
Although East Asiatic did comply with Supplemental Rule B(2) in notifying Indomar before default was entered, this notification was no more than that necessary to permit execution thereafter on the property attached, and bears no significance with respect to service of process under Rule 4. Nor may East Asiatic state that it has conformed to any of the other provisions of Rule 4. It has not complied with the Rule 4(e) alternative which permits service as provided by “any statute or rule of the court of the state in which the district court is held.” It has not satisfied the requirements of New York Business Corporation Law § 307 (McKinney Supp.1975), which, in conjunction with New York CPLR § 302 (McKinney Supp.1975), permits service upon a non-domiciliary corporation transacting business within the state if service is made upon the Secretary of State. Finally, East Asiatic has not met any of the terms of Rule 4(i) relating to service in a foreign country, and it is not proceeding against an instate defendant within the contemplation of Rule 4(d)(3) and Rule 4(f).
II.
Having determined that Eаst Asiatic had but one base of in personam jurisdiction against Indomar,
i. e.,
that which it acquired through maritime attachment, it remains only to determine the effect of a default judgment in these circumstances. Although the jurisdiction achieved through maritime attachment is denominated in personam, it is clear that, absent an appearance by defendant, the judgment had is in thе nature of quasi in rem. Indeed, the term “quasi in rem” is used in the title of Supplemental Rule E, which concerns actions commenced by maritime attachment.
See
Supplemental Rule E. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has referred to Supplemental Rule B(l) as “a quasi in rem proceeding.”
Maryland Tuna Corp. v. MS Benares,
Although attachment may issue against property held for the defendant in the district up to the amount sued for,
see
Supplemental Rule B(l), “execution in proceedings commenced by maritime in person-am attachments in which defendant has not been personally served or appeared cannot exceed the value of the attached property.” 7A Moore’s
Federal Practice
¶ B.03 n.6 (2d ed. 1972); see 2 Benedict,
supra,
§ 288. The same proposition is well established outside admiralty. In
Cooper v. Reynolds,
Although it is possible that East Asiatic could have achieved pure in person-am jurisdiction over Indomar in this Court through the defendant’s contacts with the forum and receipt of perfеcted service, it elected to proceed by means of a Supplemental Rule B attachment, which then represented the sole basis of the Court’s jurisdiction over Indomar. Since Indomar did not appear to perfect the Court’s in person-am jurisdiction,
see Atkins v. Fibre Disintegrating Co.,
Submit amended judgment in conformity herewith.
So ordered.
Notes
. Supplemental Rule B reads in pertinent part:
“Attachment and Garnishment: Special Provisions
(1) When Available; Complaint, Affidavit, and Process. With respect to any admiralty or maritime claim in persоnam a verified complaint may contain a prayer for process to attach the defendant’s goods and chattels, or credits and effects in the hands of garnishees named in the complaint to the amount sued for, if the defendant shall not be found within the district. Such a complaint shall be accompanied by an affidavit signed by the plaintiff or his attorney that, to the affiant’s knowledge, or to the best of his information and belief, the defendant cannot be found within the district. When a verified complaint is supported by such an affidavit the clerk shall forthwith issue a summons and process of attachment and garnishment. In addition, or in the alternative, the plaintiff may, pursuant to Rule 4(e), invoke the remedies provided by state law for attаchment and garnishment or similar seizure of the defendant’s property. Except for Rule E(8) these Supplemental Rules do not apply to state remedies so invoked.
(2) Notice to Defendant. No judgment by default shall be entered except upon proof, which may be by affidavit, (a) that the plaintiff or the garnishee has given notice of the action to the defendant by mailing to him a copy of the complaint, summons, and process of attachment or garnishment, using any form of mail requiring a return receipt, or (b) that the complaint, summons, and process of attachment or garnishment have been served on the defendant in a manner authorized by Rule 4(d) or (i), or (c) that the plaintiff or the garnishee has made diligent efforts to givе notice of the action to the defendant and has been unable to do so.”
. All suits in admiralty are denominated either “in personam” or “in rem.” The in rem proceeding, which does not concern us here, is against the thing itself and operates after plaintiff has acquired a lien against the property. “The lien and the proceedings
in rem
are, therefore, сorrelative — where one exists, the other can be taken, and not otherwise.”
The Rock Island Bridge,
“[m]ost actions may be maintained either in rem (if there is a maritime lien on a res in the jurisdiction) or in personam (if the defendant or respondent can be personally served with process or reached by means of an attachment proceeding), or both in rem and in personam." Benedict, supra, § 226.
. Because maritime attachment operates on a defendant by tying up his property prior to the determination of his liability,
Thyssen Steel Corp. v. Federal Commerce & Navigation Co.,
“In the usual case it is the libelant who asserts that the respondent’s activities in the district are sufficient to make it amenable to service, and the respondent in turn denies that it was doing business in the district in this sense. Here the reverse is true for it appeаrs to the advantage of the libelant to claim that the respondent is not doing business within the district so that it may be free to attach the very substantial funds standing to respondent’s credit here, whereas the respondent affirmatively asserts that it is doing business here, and that it could have been served had the libelant been so minded.”
See Antco Shipping Company v. Yukon Compania Naviera, S.A.,
The case at bar presents the unusual situation where plaintiff opts to commence proceedings by attaching a mere fraction of the claim asserted, and defendant chooses not to protect theses assets either by special appearance to dispute the attaсhment’, Supplemental Rule E(8), or by general appearance to defend against the complaint.
. In a case commenced by maritime attachment, defendants made a general appearance. The court noted that “[t]his made their position just what it would have been if they had been brought in regularly by the service of process. In this aspect of the case all defects were cured and the jurisdiction of the court over their persons became complete. This warranted the decree
in personam
for the amount adjudged to the libellants.”
Atkins v. Fibre Disintegrating Co., supra,
. Section 1963 reads as follows:
“§ 1963. Registration in other districts
A judgment in an action for the recovery of money or property now or hereafter entered in any district court which has become final by appeal or expiration of time for аppeal may be registered in any other district by filing therein a certified copy of such judgment. A judgment so registered shall have the same effect as a judgment of the district court of the district where registered and may be enforced in like manner.
A certified copy of the satisfaction of any judgment in whole or in part may be registered in like manner in any district in which the judgment is a lien.”
