Tо sustain service upon defendant by publication, plaintiff must show: (1) that the case is one in which service by publication is authorized by statute; and (2) that the questioned service has been made in accordance with statutory requirements. Counsel for defendant denies that defendant is a member of the class defined by G.S. 1-98.2(6), the statute under which plaintiff proceeds. He asserts that, even if defendant were a member of that class, a personal judgment against him based on constructive service would violate due process. He further contеnds that, in any event, plaintiff has not fulfilled the statutory requirements for service by publication.
Service of process by publication is in derogation of the common law. Statutes authorizing it, therefore, are strictly construed, both as grants of authority and in determining whether service has been made in conformity with the statute.
Jones v. Jones,
This action is neither
in rem
nor
quasi in rem
(see
Bernhardt v. Brown,
Before we can pass upon the sufficiency of plaintiff’s affidavit, to bring defendant within the class of persons defined by G.S. 1-98.2(6), we must determine the meaning of the statute. Since no comma separates the two predicates in G.S. 1-98.2(6), it is our view, and we hold, that the intent to defraud creditors or to avoid the service of summons must be shown both as to departure and as to concealment. This interpretation is, in effect, the wording of G.S. 1-440.3(4), the statute which specifies the grounds for attachment. It was likewise thus spelled out in the Code of 1883, § 218(2) (C.C.P., § 83), which authorized service by publication “where the defendant, being a resident of this state, has departed therefrom, with intent to defraud his creditors or to avoid the service of summons, or keeps himself concealed therein with like intent” (Italics ours.) The italicized words were eliminated from the Code of 1883, § 218(2), by P. L. of 1895, ch. 334. Minus these words § 484(2) of the Consolidated Statutes of 1919 was identical with the Code of 1883, § 218(2), and its identical language was carried forward in G.S. 1-98 (2). Sess. Laws 1953, ch. 919, rewrote the statute relating to service by publication, but G.S. 1-98.2(6) is in the wording of G.S. 1-98(2). See 31 N.C.L. Rev. 391.
In
Church v. Miller,
“(T)he authority of a state over one of its citizens is not terminated by the mere fact of his absence from the state. The state which accords him privileges and affords protection to him and his property by virtue of his domicile may also exact reciprocal duties. * * * The responsibilities of that citizenship arise out of the relationship to the state which domicile creates. That relationship is not dissolved by mere absence from the state. The attendant duties, like the rights and privileges incident to domicile, are not dependent on continuous presence in the state. One such incidence of domicile is amenability to suit within the state even during sojourns without the state, where the state has provided and employed a reasonable method for apprising such an absent party of the proceedings against him.” Milliken v. Meyer,311 U.S. 457 , 463,85 L. Ed. 278 , 283,61 S. Ct. 339 , 343,132 A.L.R. 1357 , 1361; accord, Allen v. Superior Court, 41 Calif. 2d 306,259 P. 2d 905 ; 42 Am. Jur., Process §§ 67, 70 (1942); Restatement, Conflict of Laws §§ 47, 75 (1934).
The great majority of cases which have considered the question have not applied to
residents
the doctrine of
Pennoyer v. Neff,
The meanings attached to the terms
personal, constructive,
and
substituted
service are so varied that individual statutes must be examined. In general, however,
personal service
means actual service of process upon defendant personally, wherever accomplished;
constructive service,
service by newspaper publication;
substituted service,
service upon
*250
some member of defendant’s family at his usual place of abode or upon a statutory agent.
Service by mail
is self-explanatory. Comment, Personal Jurisdiction over Absent Natural Persons, 44 Calif. L. Rev. 737. Personal service on a resident outside the state or substituted service at his place of abode is much more likely to be sustained than is constructive service, which, of all the methods, is the least likely to give notice. As Mr. Justicе Jackson pointed out in
Mullane v. Central Hanover B. & T. Co.,
“It is not an accident that the greater number of cases reaching this Court on the question of adequacy of notice have been concerned with actions founded on process constructively served through local newspapers. Chance alone brings to the attention of even a local resident an advertisement in small type inserted in the back pages of a newspaper, and if he makes his home outside the area of the newspaper’s normal circulation the odds that the information will never reach him are large indeed.”
In Milliken v. Meyer, supra, the personal judgment of a Wyoming court was upheld against a resident who had been personally served in Colorado pursuant to the Wyoming statutes which provided:
“Personal service out of state. In all cases where service may be made by publication under the provisions of this chapter, personal service of a copy of the summons and the petition in said action may be made out of the state. . . .” Wyo. Comp. Stat. 1920, § 5641.
“Service by publication may be had in either of the following cаses: ... 6. In actions where the defendant, being a resident of this state, has departed from the county of his residence with the intent to delay or defraud his creditors, or to avoid the service ■of a summons, or keeps himself concealed with like intent.” Wyo. Comp. Stat. 1920, § 5636.
In
McDonald v. Mabee,
*251 “Perhaps in view of his technical position and the actual presence of his family in the state, a summons left at his last and usual place of abode would have been enough. But it appears to us that an advertisement in a local newspaper is not sufficient notice to bind a person who has left a state, intending not to return. To dispense with рersonal service the substitute that is most likely to reach the defendant is the least that ought to be required if subr stantial justice is to be done.” Id. at 92,61 L. Ed. at 610 ,37 S. Ct. at 344 ,L.R.A. 1917F at 459 .
Personal service, either within or without the state, undoubtedly affords the defendant the greatest degree of protection, for it gives him actual notice. The defendant who leaves the state temporarily and iii good faith and is amenable, with reasonable effort, to personal servicé while absent, may well argue that he is entitled to it. But a defendant who leaves the state with the intent to defraud his creditors or' to avoid the service of process does not merit similar solicitude. 42 Am. Jur., Process § 72 (1942); 72 C.J.S., Process § 56b (1951). See Comment, Personal Jurisdiction over Absent Natural Persons, 44 Calif. L. Rev. 737, 741. If he conceals his whereabouts well enough, he renders personal service impossible either within or without the state. If a defendant has fraudulently fled the state or successfully keeps himself concealed therein, a plaintiff with a good cause of action may be greatly disadvantaged and the defendant will profit from his fraud unless the plaintiff can serve him with process by publication. Of necessity, often no better notice can be given. No citizen and resident of a state should be allowed, by flight, temporary absence, or concealment, to escape his legal obligations and thwart the efforts of the courts of his state to enforce the rights of others against him.
Skala v. Brockman,
Definitions and discussions of absconding debtоrs are usually found in cases involving attachment statutes. Such definitions, however, are equally applicable here. We have found no better exposition than the one which appears in
Stafford v. Mills,
“An absconding debtor is one who, with intent to defeat or delay the demands of his creditors, conceals or withdraws himself from his usual place of residence beyond the reach of process. It is not necessary that he depart from the limits of the state in which he has resided. * * * But in this, as in many other matters, each case must depend upon its оwn peculiar distinctive facts and circumstances, and the intent can be drawn from the acts of the defendant. One is naturally held to have intended the results of his own acts. * * * In one case it (evading process) may be by concealment in his own house. It may consist in going from place to place so quickly as to evade meeting with service or process anywhere. There is a limit to the creditors’ search for him, else he might never be served with process, and no attachment would ever be sustained. The creditor is bound to asсertain, if he can do so by all natural ordinary means at hand, his debtor’s whereabouts, in order to serve him with process, but this obligation has its limits in reason and common sense. A debtor may, by a careful watch of the action of the creditors, or by information from others, elude his creditors for an indefinite time, and yet he might produce proof of having been seen in so many places that it would seem reasonable that service of process could be made. So it can be perceived that concealment, with intent to defeat or delay his creditors, has a relative significance. It must depend upon the facts of each case, and they must be such, and of such probative force and effect, that *253 the court can conclude that the debtor was eluding the service of process; that he intended to do it, and that his conduct or concealment was such as to lead his creditors to the natural belief that he absconds, and when this state of affairs exists the debtor becomes subject to the writ of attachment as an absconding debtor.”
Counsel for defendant cites Bernhardt v. Brown, supra, in support of defendant’s contention that a valid judgment may not be obtained against a defendant served under G.S. 1-98.2(6) without attachment of property. That case is not authoritative here. It involved the validity of three judgments in attachment obtained in the court of a justice of the peace against a domestic corporation whose officers could not be found in the state. The court held the judgments void because, although the Code of 1883, § 218(7) (the same as G.S. 1-98(8), repealed in 1953), permitted service by publication on officers of the corporation, the General Assembly had failed, casus omissus, to authorize attachment of the property of a domestic corporation in such instances. The case did not involve the Code of 1883, § 218 (2), as there was no suggestion that the officers had absconded or concealed themselves to avoid service. Any reference, therefore, to the necessity of attachment when proceeding under § 218(2) was dictum.
We now come to the question whether the affidavit upon which the order of'publication was seciued and those affidavits considered by the judge upon the hearing are sufficient to support his conclusions that this is a case falling within the terms of G.S. 1-98.2(6); and that the statutory provisions relating to service by publication have been met. Plaintiff has not alleged that defendant has departed the state with intent to defraud his creditors. She has alleged that he has departed the state or, in the alternative, that he keeps himself concealed here to avoid his creditors. As heretofore pointed out, under G.S. 1-98.2(6), the mere departure of a residеnt from the state will not authorize service hy publication in an action such as this. Plaintiff’s right to service by publication must arise, therefore, if at all, on the alternative allegation that defendant keeps himself concealed herein to avoid service of process.
Although the weight of authority is to the contrary (see Annot., Sufficiency of affidavit as to due diligence in attempting to learn whereabouts of party to litigation, for the purpose of obtaining service by publication,
Furthermore, plaintiff has not complied with the statutory requirements for service of process by publication. To secure an order for such
*255
service, in his affidavit the applicant must state,
inter alia,
in addition to averring facts which show the action to be one of those specified in G.S. 1-98.2, the name and residence of the person to be served; or, if they are unknown, that diligent search and inquiry have been made to discover such name and residence; and that they are set forth as particularly as is known tо the applicant. G.S. 1-98.4(b) (1). “The affidavit required to support an order for service of summons by publication is jurisdictional. The omission therefrom of any of the essential aver-ments on which an order for substitute service is predicated is fatal.”
Comrs. of Roxboro v. Bumpass, supra
at 193,
Notwithstanding that the officer’s report of the accident out of which this action arose contained defendant’s address as taken from his driver’s license, and that thereafter plaintiff’s attorney learned of two more addresses, the attorney’s affidavit of July 15, 1963, upon which the order for service by рublication was obtained, contains no reference to the residence of defendant. Although it alleges that after due and diligent search defendant cannot be found within the state and service of process cannot be had on him within the state, there is no averment in the words of the statute that diligent search and inquiry have been made to discover his residence and that it is set forth as particularly as is known to plaintiff. The supplemental affidavit made on December 3, 1964, which affidavit the judge considered in passing on a motion tо dismiss, specifically avers that neither plaintiff’s counsel nor the sheriff was able to find defendant at the address shown on his driver’s license and that the sheriff did not find him at either of the other two addresses. The failure to find defendant at his last known address, however, does not eliminate the requirement that the applicant for an order allowing service by publication should set out the residence of defendant “as particularly as is known to the applicant.” If no address is known, or has never been known, the applicant should so state. G.S. 1-99.2 (c) rеquires the clerk of the court, within five days after the issuance of the order for service of process by publication, to mail a copy of the notice “to each party whose name and residence or place of business appear in the verified pleading or affidavit pursuant to the provisions of G. S. 1-98.4.” After doing so he is required to make a certificate at the bottom of his order that the notice has been duly mailed. This requirement that the clerk of the superior court mail a notice to the party being served by publication at the best address the applicant can furnish — usually the last known address — is no formal gesture of deference to due process. As every practicing attorney and law-enforcement officer knows, there are among certain classes those persons who would feel an obligation to forward or deliver a letter to one being sought, but who *256 would feel obliged to give a lawyer or a deputy sheriff no information whatever as to the whereabouts of the one sought.
Failure of a party to receive a copy of the notice mailed as required by G.S. 1-99.2 (c) does not invalidate the service of process by publication. A failure to mail the notice when an address is available, however, is a different matter. In
Jones v. Jones,
supra, the applicant failed to meet the requirements of G.S. 1-98.4 (b) (1) and (2), and the record failed to show that the clerk of the superior court had mailed the copy of notice as required by G.S. 1-99.2 (c). This Court held “the purported service of process by publication” to be fatally defective and the judgment entered on it void. See also
Harmon v. Harmon,
We note other defects in plaintiff’s attempt to perfect this service by publication. The published notice to defendant, had he read it, would have informed him that he was required to make defense not later than September 2, 1963. It omitted, however, to inform him of the penalty for failing to make defense. It did not include the following clause, which is contained in the form of notice prescribed by G.S. 1-99.3: “and uрon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court for the relief sought.” Had this been the only defect in the publication procedure, the absence of the clause might not have been fatal, but this defect is one of several.
Prior to its repeal in 1953, G.S. 1-99, in specifying the manner of publication, required the clerk of the superior court to direct the publication of the notice “in one or two newspapers to be designated as most likely to give notice to the person to bе served.” Since the enactment of Sess. Laws of 1953, ch. 919, § 1, codified,
inter alia,
as G.S. 1-99(1), the requirement has been that the clerk make an order for service of process by publication “in a designated newspaper, which newspaper must be one qualified for legal advertising pursuant to G.S. 1-597.” Notwithstanding the omission of the statutory requirement that the notice be published in a newspaper most likely to give notice to the defendant, due process still requires it. In lieu of personal service, publication in the newspaper which is most likely to reach the defendant is the least that ought to be required. Plaintiff in this case is a resident of New York; defendant, at the time of the institution of the suit, was, according to the complaint, a resident of Mecklenburg County. Although the record is silent on the matter, presumably that county was also the residence of defendant’s mother and of his mother-in-law. Nothing gives any inkling that a notice published in Iredell County, in the
Statesville Record and Landmark,
would ever come to defendant’s at
*257
tention. Under the facts as they appear from the affidavits in this case the publication should have been made in Mecklenburg County. The dangers and abusеs which could arise from the publication of process in newspapers in localities foreign to defendant are too apparent to require comment. The purpose of publication is to give notice to the party named in the notice. Publication in an obscure paper or one far removed from any location with which defendant has ever had any contact will not constitute service of summons by publication. See
Webber v. Curtiss,
We hold that the purported service of process by publication in this proceeding is fatally defective for the reasons (1) that plaintiff has neither alleged nor shown that defendant, with intent to defraud his creditors or to avoid service of process, has departed this state, nor shown that he is concealing himself herein with like intent; and (2) that plaintiff has failed to satisfy the mechanics of the publication statutes. The order denying defendant’s motion to quash the service upon him by publication is
Reversed.
