84 N.Y.S. 356 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
On April 29, 1903, the plaintiff (respondent) filed in the county clerk’s office of New York county a notice of lien affecting property belonging to the defendant (appellant) Haven. On the 25th of
On the 24th of June, 1903, a summons and complaint in an action to foreclose the lien were prepared by the plaintiff’s attorney. The action was instituted against the appellant and one Edward E. Paul Process was served within the thirty days upon the defends ant Paul, but not upon the appellant. Thirty days having elapsed and no service of process having been made upon the appellant, he moved to vacate and cancel the notice of lien. The court at Special Term denied the motion, and this appeal is taken from the order entered upon such denial.
Section 3417 of the Code of Civil Procedure is not a statute of limitation, nor does it make it compulsory upon the court to order the cancellation of a lien upon the failure of the lienor to begin a suit after notification to commence' an action within thirty days after the time specified in the notice. It is a permissive statute, clothing the court with discretionary power. It is in no sense mandatory, and the lien does not fall by a non-compliance with the notice. Therein the Code provision differs widely from the rule of construction given to statutes relating to the same matter that were in force prior . to the adoption of the Code provision. Section 22 of article 1 of the Lien Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 418) provides that “this article
The cases in which it has been held that failure ,to comply with the notice to begin suit avoided the lien arose under statutes which were strictly construed as being in derogation of the common law. For instance, Mushlitt v. Silverman (50 N. Y. 360) where the case arose under the Mechanics’ Lien Law of Kings county (Laws of 1862, chap. 478). By that act it was provided, in terms, that the lien should be discharged by the omission of the lienor- or claimant to file an affidavit of the issuing and service of a summons and complaint in an action to enforce the Hen within thirty days after a day specified for the commencement of an action in a notice which the owner was permitted to give requiring the action to be commenced on or before a certain hour on such specified day. It was held that the. act was an innovation upon the common law affecting property rights and property, authorizing, as it did, property to be incumbered without or against the consent of the owner or without a resort to legal process or legal action, and that when the act declared, as it did, that the lien may be discharged in any one of several methods, the happening of any of the events or the performance of any of the acts mentioned, operated per se as a discharge, without the necessity of further acts by any person. The decision in that case proceeded upon a strict construction of the statute. But now the statute must be liberally construed and a discretionary power is conferred upon the court. In the Mushlitb case the statute prescribed conditions for the continuance of the lien, and it was held that courts could not dispense with them nor relieve the party from the consequences of an omission. '
In the case at bar the lienor showed sufficient cause why the lien should not be discharged. He had within the thirty days prepared his summons and complaint which were served upon one of the defendants. Efforts were made to serve it upon the owner (appellant), but in conseqúence of the inability of the process server to find him service was not made. Failure to make the service was sufficiently excused. The summons was actually served on the owner on the 30th of June, 1903.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.