156 N.Y.S. 950 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
Matilda C. Johnston died intestate prior to the 12th day of December, 1904, leaving no issue of her body. One Samuel S. Peck was duly appointed administrator of her estate by the Surrogate’s Court of Albany county. On the 12th day of May, 1904, Isabella L. Troupe, claiming to be an adopted daughter, brought an action against the administrator, setting up the contract of adoption between herself and Matilda C. Johnston, the People of the State of New York being made a party to the action, and appearing and answering-by the then Attorney-General. This action resulted in a judgment, on the 9th day of November, 1906, determining that the said Isabella L. Troupe was the lawfully adopted daughter of Matilda C. Johnston, and that this fact “created a vested future estate in the plaintiff, Isabella L. Troupe, in and to all of the property of which Matilda C. Johnston died seized or possessed, and
The People of tlie State of New York appealed to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court from this judgment, and at the January term of the court for the year 1906 the judgment was affirmed (See 112 App. Div. 906) and the same was filed in the Albany county clerk s office on the eighteenth day of July of that year. Subsequently, and in November, 1906, judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the action of Troupe v. Peck, as administrator, and the People of the State of New York, which judgment appears to have been based upon the same tes
It appears, however, that some time in the year 1909 the real property involved in this litigation was offered for sale, when a Mr. Leggett, of the Attorney-General’s office, for the first time called attention to the alleged fact that there was a flaw.in the title, due to the fact that the trial of action No. 1 had been held prior to the final publication of the notice required by the provisions of section 1978 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This suggestion on the part of Mr. Leggett appears to have prevented the consummation of the proposed sale, and in the year 1911 a partition action was commenced by Frank H. Bryant to partition or sell the real estate here involved, and this action resulted in a judgment under which the property was offered for sale some time prior to December 22,1911. One Mary T. McGraw bid in the property, but subsequently refused to complete the purchase, alleging the flaw heretofore mentioned. Mr. Bryant took over the bid and received a deed of the property on the 22d day of December, 1911, and on the 8th day of June, 1912, the complaint in action No. 2 was verified, and the summons, which bears date of June
The order here appealed from was granted at the Albany Special Term on the 24th day of April, 1915, and directs that “the decision and judgment in Action No. 1, entered in the Albany county clerk’s office June 5th, 1905,” and all of the judgments of affirmance, “ and any and all other proceedings had in action No. 1, except the service and filing of the summons and pleadings and the publication of the notice of pend-ency of the action, be and the same hereby are vacated and set aside as rendered on a trial held without jurisdiction; ” that “the plaintiff and the Attorney-Gfeneral be and they are hereby relieved from the stipulation dated November 25th, 1908, for the dismissal of the appeal to the Court of Appeals and entry of judgment absolute,” and that a supplemental summons be issued, bringing in Frank H. Bryant as an additional party defendant in action No. 1, and that actions Nos. 1 and 2 be consolidated, and that in action No. 2 certain incidental amendments be made, the net result of the order being that action No. 1 is revived and action No. 2 is practically discontinued, so that, with some changes in the parties, the case is right back where it started in 1904. The question presented upon this appeal is whether the Special Term had power to thus wipe out the effect of years of litigation on the ground that the original trial was held without jurisdiction.
“Jurisdiction,” say the court in Geneva Furniture Co. v. Karpen (238 U. S. 254, 259), “is the power to consider and decide one way or the other, as the law may require,” and it would be a strange doctrine to lay down at this time that the Supreme Court of the State of New York has not jurisdiction of an action in ejectment, such as the Attorney-G-eneral is directed to commence whenever he “has good reason to
That this is the correct view of the case, and that the requirement of section 1978 of the Code of Civil Procedure is a condition precedent to the right of the plaintiff to judgment, is apparent when we consider the section more in detail; the
Obviously in an action of ejectment brought by the People of the State, where the Attorney-General did not know Isabella L. Troupe was “ claiming title thereto, ” and where she was made the defendant, with ‘ ‘ unknown claimants and heirs at law, if any, of Matilda C. Johnston,” and where Isabella L. Troupe actually appeared and answered, the case was governed, not by section 1979 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but by section 451, in so far as it related to “unknown claimants and heirs at law,” and this section, in turn,- is governed by the provisions of section 452, and the court having the plaintiff and the defendant Troupe before it, could determine the controversy between them without in any manner prejudicing the rights of “-unknown claimants and heirs at law, if any, of Matilda C. Johnston,” for a determination that Isabella L. Troupe was an adopted
All concurred; Smith, P. J., not being a member of the court at the time of the decision; Cochrane, J., not sitting.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.