121 N.Y.S. 726 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
Lead Opinion
The only question in this case is' whether in the foreclosure action brought by Charles R. Gay against Hannah Neumann and others the court acquired jurisdiction so that Rachel Segelofsky was bound by the judgment entered therein. Plaintiff attempted to make service upon her pursuant to the provisions of an order of publication. Defendant contends, first, that the form.of the order is insufficient, and, second,- that, if sufficient, its terms were not complied with. Unless deposit in the post office is dispensed with,.an order of publication must contain a direction that on or before the day of the first publication plaintiff deposit in a specified post office copies of the summons, complaint and order contained in a securely closed postpaid wrapper, directed to.the defendant to be served, at a place specified in the order. (Code Civ. Proc. § 440.) This order directedjhat the papers be deposited in the “ post office at New York,” and it is claimed that this is not the specification of a post office. Since January 1, 1898, within the territorial limits of the Greater New York there have been and now are several general post offices. In a sense they are all post offices in New York. But the post office within the boundaries of the present' borough of ,Manhattan, which was the former city of New York, is generally spoken of as the New York post office, and such designation of it would be readily understood. The United States post office authorities still recognize a distinction between the post office in Manhattan and the post offices in Brooklyn and the various other munici- ■ palities which now constitute the city of New York, which are independent offices, and the post office in Manhattan is still designated by them a& the New York post office. We think that this is a substantial compliance with the requirement of the statute, ánd,- if so, it is sufficient. (Littlejohn v. Leffingwell, 34 App. Div. 185; Mishkind-Feinberg Realty Co. v. Sidorsky, 111 id. 578; affd., 189 N. Y. 402; Cook v. Kelsey, 19 id. 412 ; McCully v. Heller, 66 How. Pr. 468.)
The question whether the terms of the order were complied with
There must be judgment for the defendant upon the submission of the controversy, but without costs.
Jerks and Thomas, JJ., concurred in both opinions; Woodward, J., dissented.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the opinion of Hr. Justice Burr, but I think a few additional words may not be amiss.
Under the Code of Procedure the rule as to mailing a copy of the summons, when it was served by publication, was set forth in section 135 thereof. The language of the then statute was that the summons and other papers should “ be forthwith deposited in the post office.” In our present Code (§ 440) the language used is more specific, and the requirement is that the party shall “ deposit [the papers] in a specified post-office.” This means that the order on which the service is based must specify the post office in which the deposit is to be ' made. In this case the order specifies as follows: “ in the post office at Hew York.” This language maybe taken, as Hr, Justice Burr points out, to mean the post office in Hew York city in the borough of Hanhattan. Our present Code, however, uses, for the purpose of prescribing methods of service through the mails, three terms, “ post-office ” (§ 440); “ post-office box ” (§ 797); “ branch post-office ” (§ 801). The article which employs the terms “ post-office box” and “branch post-office” (§§ 796-802) by express terms does not relate to the service of a summons. (§ 802.) In the use of these various terms the Code of Civil Procedure was framed with relation to the Revised Statutes of the United States. The Federal statutes create and prescribe, in this respect, three dis
It appears that the letter or mail box in which the papers were actually deposited was located in the “Trinity Building, No. 111 Broadway, New York City.” This building is, presumably, a private building. No letter box could be maintained therein'under the Federal statutes, unless the building was open to the public during business hours. (Act of Congress of Jan. 23,1893.) The stipulation in this record that the box in question was maintained by the postal department as a part of the post office in New York city means only that the box was lawfully authorized under the act of 1893, which amended an act of 1887. (See 24 U. S. Stat. at Large, 569, chap. 388, as amd. by 27 id. 421, chap. 41.) Neither under our statutes nor under the Federal statutes was this box “the post office at New York.” Between this box and thé post office another governmental agency intervened, to wit, the carrier who collected the mail from the box and brought it to the post office itself. He, of ■ course, was another agent of the postal department, but with an agency again created by a separate and distinct statutory authorization. (See 24 U. S. Stat. at Large, 355, chap. 14; U. S. R. S. § 3865 et seq.) A paper deposited in the post office itself' necessarily escaped any
Thus there is an evident reason why our statute should have. prescribed “ a specified post-office ” rather than permit an ordinary mailing.
Jenks and Thomas, JJ., concurred.
Judgment for defendant upon submitted controversy, without costs.