OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue presented on this motion by defendant to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction is whether service upon a limited partnership may be made by delivery of process to a person of
Facts
Plaintiffs effected service in this personal injury action by delivery of process to the doorman of the apartment building in which the general partner (Samuel J. Jemal) of the defendant limited partnership resided. While the complaint alleges alternative allegations with respect to the status of the defendant, plaintiffs’ papers assert that defendant is a limited partnership, attaching thereto a copy of the deed to the building in which the subject accident occurred showing transfer of ownership thereof to the defendant limited partnership. Also attached to plaintiffs’ papers was a copy of the certificate of limited partnership showing Mr. Jemal as the general partner. Curiously, defendant’s counsel maintained at oral argument that the owning entity was a general partnership. However, since plaintiffs stated that they were suing the defendant as a limited partnership, defendant’s counsel acknowledged that such entity was the client the firm was representing in this action.
The affidavit of Mr. Jemal does not dispute that service was made upon the doorman of the building in which he resides, nor does it challenge the assertion that the doorman denied plaintiffs’ process server access to his apartment. Under such circumstances, the service would provide jurisdiction over an individual defendant (see, duPont, Glore Forgan & Co. v Chen,
Discussion
Prior to the 1991 addition to CPLR 310, the sole statutory provision dealing with service upon a partnership was the provision thereof which stated that “[personal service upon persons conducting a business as a partnership may be made
However, in Cooney v East Nassau Med. Group (
In his 1991 Supplementary Practice Commentaries in McKinney’s Consolidated Laws of New York (Book 7B, CPLR C310:l, 2001 Pocket Part, at 248-249), Professor Alexander opined that this amendment “was intended to abrogate entirely the use of CPLR 308 for service on partnerships * * * [and that] CPLR 310 (a), therefore * * * contemplates only personal delivery to a partner and does not incorporate by reference all of the methods of personal service that are contained in CPLR 308.” However, in Foy v 1120 Ave. of Ams. (223 AD2d, supra, at 237), the Second Department held that the intent of the Legislature “was to simplify service on a partnership” and that the Legislature “approved of, and intended to perpetuate, preexisting law” when it “retained unchanged the prior language of CPLR 310 as new subdivision (a) of CPLR 310.” Consequently, the Court concluded that “substituted service upon one of the partners pursuant to CPLR 308 (2) constituted service upon the partnership pursuant to CPLR 310 (a)” (supra, at 233). The reasoning of this case was followed by the First Department in Bell v Bell, Kalnick, Klee & Green (supra). Although in these two cases service pursuant to CPLR 308 (2) was made at the office of the partnership, said subdivision authorizes service upon “a person of suitable age and discretion at the actual place of business, dwelling place or usual place of abode of the person to be served.” Hence, as first above stated, if defendant were a general partnership, service as aforesaid at the residence of a partner would provide the court with jurisdiction over defendant.
By chapter 341 of the Laws of 1999, subdivision (a) of said section 121-109 was repealed and reenacted in substantially similar form as CPLR 310-a. The purpose of the amendment was to consolidate in article 3 of the CPLR the provisions for service upon limited partnerships, limited liability partnerships and limited liability companies.
The question thus presented is whether the current statute governing service upon limited partnerships incorporates the provisions for “substituted” and “nail and mail” service provided in CPLR 308 (2) and (4). As indicated above, case law has incorporated said provisions into CPLR 310 by reason of subdivision (a) thereof which provides for jurisdiction over the partnership by “personally serving” the summons upon any partner. Service pursuant to any provision of CPLR 308 constitutes “personal service.”
However, CPLR 310-a does not contain language similar to subdivision (a) of CPLR 310. While it could be argued that the aforesaid Partnership Law § 121-109 (d) would incorporate CPLR 308, I find that the language of CPLR 310-a (a) that “[p]ersonal service * * * shall be made * * * in the manner provided by law * * * as if such person was the defendant” demonstrates the Legislature’s intent to incorporate into that section the means of service authorized in CPLR 308. Hence, service in the manner effected herein was sufficient to grant the court jurisdiction over the defendant.
Accordingly, defendant’s motion to dismiss is denied.
