101 Misc. 47 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1917
1. The purchaser at a judicial sale attacking a title has the burden of showing facts which impair the title (Greenblatt v. Hermann, 144 N. Y. 13; Seitz v. Messerschmitt, 117 App. Div. 401, 407; Hagan v. Drucker, 90 id. 28; Goodwin v. Crooks, 33 Misc. Rep. 39), and where the validity of
2. Following these rules the order for service by publication in this case should be sustained and the purchaser upon the partition sale should be required to complete his purchase. The only question involved on this motion is whether or not the affidavits upon which the order for publication was made against unknown defendants were sufficient to confer jurisdiction. The Code provides that a summons may be served by publication where the defendant remains unknown to the plaintiff after the latter has made diligent inquiry. Code Civ. Pro. § 438, subd. 1. While the action was pending one of the defendants died and the plaintiff sought to bring in as unknown heirs the parties who would be entitled to inherit her share of the real estate and obtained an order for service by publication. The action proceeded to judgment and sale and the purchaser now refuses to complete the purchase on the ground that the affidavits upon which the order for service by publication was made show that the defendant died intestate without leaving any persons entitled to inherit her interest in the real estate in which event her interest escheated to the state which should have been made a party defendant.
The expressions used in these affidavits must be construed in connection with the supplemental summons and complaint to ascertain whether the information which the plaintiff was seeking to convey to the court was intended to establish that the defendant died without leaving any persons entitled to inherit her interest in the real estate or that she died leaving persons entitled to inherit whose names were ££ unknown ” to the plaintiff. The theory upon which the supplemental summons and complaint were issued was that the defendant died leaving persons entitled to inherit but that they were unknown to the plaintiff and this is what the affidavits upon the application for the order for service by publication sought to convey and not that she died without leaving any persons entitled to inherit her interest in the real estate. If she had so died her interest in the property would have escheated to the state and the state would have been a proper and necessary party defendant, but a fair construction of the affidavits is that the statements made in them were not intended to establish the fact that she had died without leaving any persons entitled to inherit her interest in the property but that the names of such persons if any were ££ unknown ” to the plaintiff. Plaintiff was required to show that he had made diligent inquiry to
Motion granted without costs. ■