170 N.Y. 145 | NY | 1902
The plaintiff had recovered a judgment against one Bernard J. Tinney for conversion and an execution thereon had been issued against his person, upon which he had been committed to jail. Tinney as principal and the defendant as surety gave a bond to the sheriff in the usual form, upon which Tinney was admitted to the jail limits. Tinney subsequently departed from the limits and was absent therefrom on the third day of September, 1900, on which day this action was brought upon the bond for the amount due and unpaid upon the execution by the service of the summons personally upon Francis Hendricks, superintendent of insurance, at Syracuse, N.Y. The defendant was a foreign insurance corporation doing business in this state and had previously executed a power of attorney in accordance with the provisions of the statute, constituting the superintendent of insurance of this state or his successor in office its true and lawful attorney in this state on whom process of law may be served in any action or special proceeding instituted against it. The day on which the summons was served was a public holiday known as Labor Day, and after this action was moved for trial the defendant asked for a dismissal of the complaint upon that ground. This motion was denied, and an exception was taken. *147
The Public Holiday Law, as incorporated in chapter 614 of the Laws of 1897, amending the Statutory Construction Law in relation thereto, has recently received the attention of this court inWalton v. Stafford (
In this case, as we have seen, the service was made upon the superintendent in the city of Syracuse, miles away from his office in the Capitol at Albany. It was served upon him for the reason that he was the appointed agent of the defendant, representing it in this state for the purpose of receiving and admitting the service of process in actions or special proceedings sought to be brought against it. In receiving and accepting service he acted as agent of the defendant company and not as an officer of the state. While the statute required the defendant, before engaging in business in this state, to *148 execute and deliver to him a power of attorney to receive the service of process, his action under the power of attorney was that of the company, to whom he could be called to account for any misconduct or omission with reference thereto. If the defendant had been a natural person residing in this state, or if its officers, upon whom service of process could be made by law, could have been found within this state, service might have been made upon them upon that day, and no claim could be made under this statute that such service was not authorized. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the service was valid. (Didsbury v. Van Tassell, 56 Hun, 423; People ex rel. Vil. of Fulton v.Bd. Supervisors Oswego Co., 50 Hun, 105.)
The other questions raised upon this review have been correctly answered by the Appellate Division, and do not require further discussion.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.