225 A.D. 256 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1929
The plaintiff on July 30, 1927, obtained a judgment against Frank Kuehn and Charles Metz, trading as Kuehn & Metz, for $3,475.55, in a court of record, the Court of Common Pleas, Hamilton county, O. He sued upon that Ohio judgment in
The plaintiff moved for summary judgment. He annexed to his moving affidavit exemplified copies of the Ohio judgment, and the entry thereof, upon which the complaint herein is founded. The Ohio judgment is based upon a note for $2,100, to which there was attached an authorization to confess judgment, empowering an attorney to appear for that purpose. The note is dated April 22, 1916, city of Columbus, State of Ohio, with a due date of one month thereafter. It purports to be signed by Kuehn & Metz under seal and by Frank Kuehn under seal. It contains a provision: “ We, any or either of us, hereby authorize and empower any attorney at law to appear for us, any or either of us, in an action on the above note at any time after the same becomes due, as herein provided in any court of record in or of this State or elsewhere, to waive the issuing and service of process against us, * * * confess judgment
in favor of the legal holder of the above note' against us, any or either of us, for the amount due with interest provided and cost of suit * * *.”
The judgment which ensued some eleven years later in the State of Ohio includes interest for that period. Plaintiff’s affidavit also shows that in the schedule of bankruptcy in proceedings under which the defendant Metz was adjudicated a bankrupt there was no listing of this note or any mention of the payee, Lindenberg, or the indorsee, Motor Securities Company, or the plaintiff; that the plaintiff had no knowledge of said bankruptcy; that, therefore, the debt, which is the basis of the judgment, was not discharged.
The defendant Metz does not submit in his affidavit any evidentiary facts to sustain the defense which is founded upon the bankruptcy adjudication. Without giving the date of the bankruptcy adjudication, he asserts that since the adjudication was subsequent to the date of said note the effect of that adjudication was to terminate the authority of his former partner, Kuehn, to do any
Metz does, however, submit evidentiary matter with respect to the first defense. He does not submit any affidavit from Kuehn,
' who seems to have been his former partner. ’ Metz asserts that he never signed the note which is the basis of the Ohio judgment and that he never authorized any appearance to be made for him. He further states that neither he nor his firm- had any occasion to sign such a note and that neither got anything of value from Lindenberg or anybody else under it. Metz further states that he has been a resident of New York city for thirty-two years and never lived in Ohio, and that he never received any notice personally or by mail of the suit in Ohio. These latter evidentiary statements raised questions of fact upon which the defendant Metz was entitled to a trial. They, therefore, precluded the granting of the motion for summary judgment which the plaintiff herein has obtained.
There is involved herein a question of law which is not free from difficulty. It is ' conceded that the note upon which the Ohio judgment is founded was not signed by the defendant Metz. It is undisputed that the defendants Metz and Kuehn were residents of New York State and'not of Ohio, although the” note purports to be an Ohio contract. The note was apparently signed in New York by F. Kuehn individually and also by Kuehn in the name of Kuehn & Metz. The law in this State seems to be that a confession of judgment made by a partner on behalf of a partnership is valid only as to the partner confessing and can affect only that partner’s individual property and his interest in the partnership effects. (Crane v. French, 1 Wend. 311; Everson v. Gehrman, 10 How. Pr. 301; 34 C. J. 101; 30 Cyc. 518; Partnership Law, § 20, subd. 3, ^ d.) Therefore, the note upon which the Ohio judgment is based, not having been executed by the defendant Charles Metz, may not be the basis of a judgment against Metz personally so far as bis individual property is concerned nor against him personally so far as his interest in the partnership assets is concerned. Metz is entitled to assert that the Court of Common Pleas in Ohio obtained no jurisdiction over him, personally upon an instrument, which he did not execute, even though it was executed in a firm name by a partner of Metz and also executed in the individual name of that partner. No rule of law bars him from asserting that fact by way of establishing that the foreign judgment is invalid as to him. A judgment of a court of another State having jurisdiction is entitled to the
In Teel v. Yost (supra) the judgment sued upon had been obtained by confession in a court of general jurisdiction in Pennsylvania. The instrument which was sued upon, however, had been executed by the defendant and both parties to the note resided in Pennsylvania. In the instant case the defendants Metz and Kuehn did not and do not reside in Ohio, where the judgment upon a confession was entered. If the defendant Metz had been a resident of the State of Ohio, a different situation would prevail. That State would then be entitled by statute to provide that Metz was bound by the instrument sued upon, even though not executed by him, to the extent of having the instrument given effect to bind Metz, as a resident, to the authorization set out in the instrument, even though executed by Kuehn individually and on behalf of the partnership. The State of Ohio, however, would have no constitutional power so to provide by statute with respect to a non-resident. That would not be due process. The principle that is involved is the same as or similar to the one involved in substituted service. A State may provide for substituted service with respect to its residents even though there be no jurisdiction in rem so as to evolve a judg ment in personam, but it cannot provide for substituted service with respect to non-residents unless there be jurisdiction in rem to sustain substituted or published service of process.
The judgments of a court of record of a foreign State may be attacked collaterally for want of jurisdiction (Smith v. Central Trust Co., 154 N. Y. 333, 338), but the burden of proof as to the want of jurisdiction is upon the defendant, who must allege it. (Rice v. Coutant, 38 App. Div. 543.) The defendant Metz, however, has sustained that burden. The presumptive effect of the judgment sued upon by the plaintiff for the purposes of this motion is overcome by his denial that he ever was personally served, and by his assertion that the judgment note sued upon was not executed by bim and not binding upon him, and, therefore, the ostensible authority to appear for him, contained therein, is of no effect.
The plaintiff claims, however, that the defendant Metz was required, as part of his burden, to show that the laws of the State
The order granting the motion for summary judgment, and the judgment entered thereon, should be reversed upon the law and the facts, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for summary judgment denied, with ten dollars costs, for the reason that there are questions of fact respecting a validly pleaded defense upon which the defendant Metz is entitled to a trial. The appeal from the order on the motion to strike out affidavit of Thomas F. Scanlon should be dismissed, without costs.
Lazansky, P. J., Young, Kappeb, and Seeger, JJ., concur.
Order granting motion for summary judgment, and judgment entered thereon, reversed upon the law and the facts, with ten