11 N.Y.S. 661 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
Section 440 of the Code, which authorizes an order for the service of a summons by publication, or upon a non-resident out of the state, is as follows: “The order must direct that service of the summons on the defendant named or described in the order be made by publication in two newspapers, * * .* or at the option of the plaintiff by service of the summons, and of a copy of the complaint and order without the state upon the defendant personally.” It must also contain either a direction to mail, in a specified post-office, copies of the summons, complaint, and order, or a statement that the judge dispenses with the deposit of any paper. It is settled by several decisions that the order must contain a provision for the publication of the summons to give the court jurisdiction. See Ritten v. Griffith, 16 Hun, 454; Fetes v. Volmer, 8 N. Y. Supp. 294. The order in this case contains the provision for the service by publication, or at the option of the plaintiff by personal service without the state. It failed, however, to contain a direction that on or before the first day of publication the plaintiff deposit in a specified post-office one or more sets of copies of the summons, complaint, and order, directed to the defendants at a place named in the order. In the ease of Weil v. Martin, 24 Hun, 647, it was held that, although in every case the order must contain a provision for the service by publication, where the attorney does not intend to serve the summons personally, it is not necessary to provide for the exercise of that right, the court saying: “The provision made by the Code is peremptory that such direction [the publication] must be given to warrant a substituted service of this nature of the summons and complaint. To that extent the order is required to go in all cases in order to conform to the unqualified enactment contained in the Code upon this subject. It is only when the plaintiff may desire to avail himself of the privilege created of serving papers personally out of the state that the order is required to provide for the exercise of that right.” And this case appears to .have been followed in the third department in the case of O’Neil v. Bender, 30 Hun, 204, where Ritten v. Griffith is cited. The general term in two departments having thus held that it is not necessary that the order should contain the provision for personal service, it would seem that the same rule should apply as to the provision for mailing, where it was not the intention of the plaintiff to publish the summons; for it is plain that it is only in case of publication that the mailing is necessary. The summons is only directed to be mailed on or before the day of the first publication. If such publication never takes place, the papers are never to be mailed; and, in this case, no such publication having been made, the time never arrived when, had the provision been made in the order, the papers should have been mailed.. I think, therefore, it should he held on this motion that the court obtained jurisdiction over the defendants by the service out of the state.
There is, however, another objection taken by the purchaser that I think is fatal. The guardian ad litem was appointed on application of plaintiff’s attorney after the time of the infants to plead had expired. There is no proof of the service of the summons and complaint upon the guardian ad litem, no pleading or appearance by him on behalf of the infants, and, so far as appears, he received no.potice Of his appointment until he consents to
The motion should be granted, and the purchaser relieved from his purchase. Order to be settled on notice.