9 N.Y.S. 593 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The motion of the appellant, Phebe Brandy, which was denied by the special county judge of Chautauqua county, was made under section 445 of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to the appearances and defenses of the parties defendant in an action who are served, not personally, but by order of publication. This section of the Code permits a party, thus served without the state, to defend the action, on application and sufficient cause shown, (1) at any time before final judgment; (2) after final judgment, and at any time within one year after personal service of a written notice of the judgment; and, (3) if such notice has not been served, then within seven years after the filing of the judgment roll.
This action, which was brought to foreclose a mortgage purporting to have been executed by the defendant Joseph P. Brandy and the appellant, his wife, to David Beaty, to secure a bond in the sum of $7,500, with interest, was begun in the month of August, 1883. The appellant was served personally in the city of Philadelphia with a .copy of the summons and complaint under an order of publication. ¡No defense being interposed by her, judgment was taken against all of the defendants on the 24th day of December, 1883, and the sale of the mortgaged premises was made on the 6th day of February, 1884. A report of such sale was subsequently made to the court, and the usual order of confirmation was granted. ¡No notice of the entry of the judgment was served upon the appellant. Her motion for leave to defend the action was made within the seven years mentioned in the statute. The learned special county judge, though writing no opinion, in making his decision of the motion has manifestly placed the denial of it upon the ground that the application was addressed solely to the discretion of the court, and that in the exercise of such discretion the motion, which was delayed for six years and eleven months, ought to be denied. The sole question is whether this conclusion was correct or not. It will be observed that the present Code has wrought a material change in the language of section 135 of the Code of Procedure. As the statute now reads, the application must be granted if sufficient cause be shown therefore. We are left somewhat in the dark as to what might or might not be deemed sufficient cause, under the language of the statute; but it is plain that, if a case is presented where sufficient cause is actually shown for the interposition of an answer by a defendant thus served out of the state, the court has no discretion in the premises, but must grant the motion. On principle, it would seem, where a limitation of time is given to defend as by this section, namely, within one year after the service of the notice of the judgment, and, in the absence of such notice, within seven years, that the right to defend was absolute. It clearly is not incumbent upon the applicant to show any irregularity in the proceedings had against him, or any defect in the judgment from which he ought to be relieved. The fact must not be lost sight of, that this is a jurisdictional question, and not merely one of procedure and practice, where the imperative “must” may be treated, not as mandatory, as was done in the case of Fleischmann v. Bennett, 79 N. Y. 579, where the question arose only upon an application for leave to file a supplemental complaint under section 544 of the (lode. We do not understand the court of appeals there to intimate any decision which would warrant this court, where the question of jurisdiction
The proposed answer is a positive denial that this defendant executed the mortgage which was foreclosed in this action. Her own affidavit in addition shows that not only did she claim consistently during all these^ears that she had not executed the mortgage, but the further fact that she had been importuned to execute the same, and had refused to do so, and that such importunity and such refusal had made such an impression upon her mind as there could be no doubt of the fact, according to her recollection. It is not necessary, however, to consider these facts, or those adduced in the affidavits which were filed in behalf of the plaintiffs, designed to show that the signature is that of this appellant; for a question of this grave importance should not, in any event, be tried upon affidavits. The proposed answer, putting in issue, as it does, the fact without the existence of which no judgment could be properly taken against the appellant, is sustained by the facts heretofore stated, and it made a case, being supported by affidavits of regularity, which, in our judgment, required the county court to grant the application, for there, did not appear, upon the hearing before that court, any fact which could preclude the applicant, by any act of hers, for availing herself of the provisions of this statute. Under these facts, no question of loches arises. Where the statute plainly prescribes a time within which a thing may be done, it is not loches on the part of the litigant to make a motion, even at the latest period prescribed, where no intervening facts appear rendering it unconscionable for the application to be granted. But proper terms for granting the motion must be imposed. If our rendering of this statute is correct, it would be competent for the court to grant a motion of this character without imposing the costs, when the same is made before final judgment; but after judgment,
Dwight, P. J., concurs. Corlett, J., concurs in result.