3 Abb. Pr. 392 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
The counsel for the purchaser rests his objection to completing this purchase upon the case of Burroughs v. Reiger,'
I think this portion of the opinion must be read and construed in connection with the facts before the court. There, about two months and a half intervened between the filing of the complaint and notice, and the service of the process. During that interval, the person applying for the aid of the court, purchased the property and went into possession, without any actual knowledge of any proceedings in respect to the action. The question for decision was whether, as to such a purchaser, the filing of the Us pendens was constructive notice of the pendency of the action. Though the expression made use of is general, I must suppose that it was intended to apply to the case in hand; and to declare the notice invalid only as to an intervening purchaser or encumbrancer.
Under the practice in Chancery, the bill was required to be filed before the subpoena could be issued; and of course some time must, and much might, elapse after the subpoena was issued before it could be served. But it was said as long ago as 1815, in the case of Murray v. Ballou, (1 John. Ch. R., 576), that the “ Us pendens begins from the service of the subpoena after the bill is filed.” The soundness of this position was recognized in Hayden v.. Bucklin, (9 Paige, 516).
The ground of the decision in Burroughs v. Reiger is that notice of the pendency of an action which has not been commenced is an impossibility and an absurdity. But as soon as process has been served, the action is commenced; and then this reasoning loses its force. The fact stated does then exist. The action is then pending. The notice ceases to be the statement of a falsehood, and becomes notice of a fact. To hold the notice invalid forever, because there may have been some interval of time however short, when it was not true in point of fact, and was therefore null, is to make a rule of law superior to and independent of the reason on which it is founded. The maxim, eessante raUone, eessat guogue lex, applies.
If any other considerations were required to warrant this conclusion, they might be found in the extreme inconvenience that would result from such a rule. It is, in most cases, impossible to make the service of process and the filing of the
The motion must be granted.
In this case,—which was decided in the Supreme Court, second district, at special term, 1856, by Rockwell, J.,—after the filing of the complaint and a notice of pendency of action, in foreclosure, but before the service of the summons and complaint on any of the defendants, the premises had been sold to a purchaser for value, and who took without notice, unless the lis pendens was constructive notice.
Held, that it was not such notice. An action cannot properly be said to be pending until after it has been commenced. It is pending during the interval between the time of its commencement and its final determination. /Actions are commenced by the service of a summons. (Code, (/ 127). Notice of the pendency of an action which has not been commenced is an impossibility and an absurdity. It is not a notice of a fact, but a statement of a falsehood. The fact stated does not exist-The action is not pending. To allow the title to property to be clouded and tied up by a deceptive and mendacious notice of this description, would tend to produce great hardship and injustice. The action might not be commenced by the service of process for years after the filing of such a notice; neither the purchaser nor the vendor could remove the cloud. Whereas if the statement in the notice was true, if the action was in fact pending, the plaintiff might be compelled to move on to judgment, or to abandon his claim.
The true construction and meaning of the statute is that although the action may be commenced by the actual service of process, the filing of a notice of pendency of the action shall not affect subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers until the complaint is filed. So that a person who, upon investigating the title in the clerk’s office discovers the notice, may also find in the same office the complaint, and ascertain from that the precise nature and scope of the action. But filing the notice before the action has been commenced by the service of process, is a nullity. Under the practice before the Code, although as against the defendant the suit might be considered as commenced from the issuing and even for certain purposes from the teste of process, yet an innocent purchaser could only be charged with constructive notice of the pendency of the suit from the time of the service of the process. (Citing Murray a. Barlow, I Johns. Ch. R., 568; Hayden a. Bucklin, 9 Paige, 512).