91 N.J. Eq. 225 | New York Court of Chancery | 1920
The complainant is the tenant of lands on the Vater front at Bayonne, under a lease made June 5th, 1889, for the term of sixty years, at‘a rental of $4,250 per annum for the first twenty years, payable quarter-yearly in advance, and for each ten-year period thereafter at a rental to be fixed by arbitrators, landlord and tenant each to select one, and the arbitrators to select an umpire in case they could not agree, and
*226 “If for any causo a valid award fixing rentals shall not be made and delivered at or within the times above limited, then the landlord may recover by action from time to time at law or in equity a fair quarterly compensation for the use and occupation of the demised premises.”
The complainant and defendant duly appointed arbitrators to appraise tire rental of the ten-year period, beginning June 5th, 1919. The arbitrators were unable to agree upon an award or an umpire, and this without fault on the part of either complainant or defendant. The complainant asks this court to determine tire rental.
On June 6th, 1919, after the bill was filed, the defendant sued the complainant in the supreme court of New York for use and occupation for the first quarter year — June 5th to September 5th, 1919 — laying the damages at $17,067.75.' The case was at issue and on the trial list when the defendant here was ordered to show cause why he should not be restrained from further prosecuting his action. Whether this order should be made absolute or discharged is one of the questions to be decided.
• ■ The bill presents a cause for equitable relief. It is not to be likened unto a bill for specific performance of a contract for the sale of land at a price to be fixed by arbitrators. There the contract is executory. The award is of the essence of the contract, and equity will not appoint arbitrators to complete the contract for the purpose of enforcement. That is well settled. McKibbin v. Brown, 14 N. J. Eq. 13; Woodruff v. Woodruff, 44 N. J. Eq. 349; Davila v. United Fruit Co., 88 N. J. Eq. 602. Here the substance of the contract is the demise and the covenant to pay rent; and the tenant has been in possession. The method set up for ascertaining the rental is subsidiary and incidental, of form and not of substance; and having proved abortive the court will substitute itself for the arbitrators. Dinham v. Bradford (1869), 5 L. R. Ch. App. 519, is an illustration. There “it was agreed that one partner should purchase, at the close of the partnership', the share of the other; at 'a valuation by two persons. Trouble arising between the partners, no arbitrators were appointed and a bill was filed for a valuation. The defendant relied on the doctrine that an agreement for sale, price
Hor is the above-quoted provision reserving to the landlord the right to sue quarter-yearly for use and occupation, -in default of an award, a thing apart from the main covenant for a rental based upon a ten-year appraisal. It furnishes no distinct and independent cause of action for use and occupation, but simply gives a right of action in a contingency for a “fair quarterly
The power of the court to enjoin the prosecution of a foreign suit is unquestionable and conceded. Margarum v. Moon, 63 N. J. Eq. 586. The point elaborately argued in the briefs is whether the case is one in which the power ought to be exercised. The admonition running through the authorities is to exercise it sparingly. Where the court of a sister state has jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, equity will not interfere unless upon a clear showing that the process is being used in an unconscionable manner- — oppressively—as instanced in Standard Roller Bearing Co. v. Crucible Steel Co., 71 N. J. Eq. 61, or, as was there said, “unless the- case involves some equitable element which it cannot apply.” See Shaw v. Frey, 69 N. J. Eq. 321. Chancellor Pitney, in Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Mining and Smelting Co., 74 N. J. Eq. 457, said: “On general principles, equity will not interfere with the right of any person to bring an action for the redress of grievances — the right preservative of all rights — except for grave reasons, and on grounds of comity the power of one state to interfere with a litigant who is in due course pursuing his rights- and remedies in the courts of another state ought to be sparingly exercised. The courts of New Jersey ought not to assume, directly or by indirection, any appellate jurisdiction over the courts of Massachusetts, nor proceed in giving judgment here upon the idea that the courts of that commonwealth are in the least degree incompetent or unwilling to do full and complete justice in all eases that are fairly within their jurisdiction.”
Moreover, the defendant’s action was begun first. The bill here was filed before his suit was started, but process was not served, and jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties was not acquired until long afterwards — approximately three months. The defendant is a non-resident. The filing of a bill and the issuing of process, not served, in an action in personam against a non-resident, do not commence a suit in equity. Service is essential. Commencement is marked by the issuance of subpoena after bill filed, provided the subpoena is instrumental, directly or indirectly, in bringing the defendant within the jurisdiction of the court. See Crowell v. Botsford, 16 N. J. Eq. 458; Haughwout v. Murphy, 22 N. J. Eq. 531; Hermann v.
The other question is whether this court has acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant.
The bill was filed May 31st, 1919, and the subpeena, attested on that day, was returned non est inventus. The defendant being a resident of New York, substituted service was made, returnable August 25th, 1919. On that day the defendant, upon a conditional appearance, obtained a stay of proceedings and an order that the complainant show cause why the order for substituted service should not be vacated. ' In the meanwhile a second subpeena issued and was served personally on the defendant, in this state, oh August 27th, 1919, and motion is made to set aside the writ and service on the ground that a second subpeena cannot go forth without the order of the court.
The order for substituted service was improvidently entered. The suit is in no sense in rem or quasi' in rem. Kempson v. Kempson, 63 N. J. Eq. 783; Andrews v. Quayaquil and Quito Railway Co., 69 N. J. Eq. 211; 71 N. J. Eq. 768; Amparo
' The order for service by publication being vain — no more, in legal effect, than a piece of blank paper — there was then nothing but a subpoena returned “not found” at the time the second one was issued and served. Thére is no rule of procedure in chancery requiring a court order for a second-subpoena after the first has been misspent. The writ, although issued out of and under the seal of the court, is but a notice to the defendant to appear. It is not a mandate to one of the court’s officers, and, until P. L. 1880 p. 74, could be served by any person. West v. Smith, 2 N. J. Eq. 309. Section 3 of' the Chancery act, which has been in our statutes since 1799 (Pat. L. p. 429), empowers the solicitor in a cause to issue it, and the fair implication is, that he may do so toties quo ties until service, viz., until legal notice of the suit be given the defendant. Whatever the procedure may be in other jurisdictions, the practice has grown up in this court, if not by virtue of the statute under its influence, which has been uniformly followed and is now firmly established, that subpoena may issue as often as necessary to bring the defendant into court, and that without an order. Ewald v. Ortynsky, 78 N. J. Eq. 527, is cited as an authority in denial of this view. In that case the sheriff’s return, regular upon its face, was, that service had been made upon the defendant corporation by delivery to one Barna, its president and agent. The corporation, instead of moving to quash the writ and service, filed a plea in har to the- jurisdiction, setting up that Barna was not its president and agent. The complainant joined issue and went to trial on the question of fact, which was found against him. Under the old practice, then prevailing but shortly
The text in 32 Cyc. 446, that “the court has inherent power to award such further process (alias writ), but the clerk has no such authority to issue it without an order of the court, in the absence of statute,” manifestly, is not applicable. It is based upon, and finds its limitations in, the codes of the states represented by the cases cited in the foot notes.
The motion to quash the writ and service will be denied. Fo costs.