175 N.E. 533 | NY | 1931
A civil action is commenced by the service of a summons. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 218.) In an action to annul a marriage the defendant may be served by publication. (Id. § 232.) Such service is made when the summons has been published in two newspapers for six successive weeks, and the summons and complaint, together with a notice, have been mailed to the defendant. (Rules Civ. Prac. rule 50.) It is complete on the forty-second day after the day of first publication. (Rule 51.) "In all cases when publication of the summons is ordered, service of the copy of the summons and complaint and of any accompanying notice required by rules by the delivery thereof to the defendant personally without the State is equivalent to notice by publication and deposit in the post-office." (Civ. Prac. Act, § 233.) Since publication for six weeks and mailing completes service by publication, commences the action and furnishes jurisdiction, necessarily its "equivalent," viz., personal service without the State, equally well provides jurisdiction. True, rule 51 in part provides: "Service without the State in lieu of publication is complete ten days after proof thereof is filed." However, the convention which formulated the rules was permitted to make only such rules as were "not inconsistent with the Judiciary Law nor with the Civil Practice Act, adopted by this Legislature." (Laws of 1920, ch. 902; Laws of 1921, ch. 370.) The full equivalence with publication of personal service without the State having been declared by the Legislature, the convention was powerless to provide that to constitute such equivalence, an additional element, viz., the lapse of a stated period of time after service must be present. The sentence quoted from rule 51 is immediately preceded by this: "For the purpose of reckoning the time within which the defendant *116 must appear or answer, service by publication is complete on the forty-second day after the day of first publication." Doubtless it was for the purpose so announced, and that purpose only, that the provision in reference to the completion of personal service without the State was promulgated. Clearly, it could have no greater force, even if, indeed, it be forceful to accomplish that result. Certainly, under section 233 of the Civil Practice Act, personal service without the State when made, ipso facto, commences the action and supplies jurisdiction.
The plaintiff, in the annulment suit instituted by her against a former husband, pursuant to an order of publication, had made service without the State fully eight months prior to the entry of the judgment of annulment. It is true that an affidavit of service, accompanied by an appropriate certificate, as to the authority of the non-resident notary who administered the oath to the affiant, was not filed until the moment when the judgment was entered. Clearly the utmost which might be claimed is that the judgment was prematurely entered; since ten days had not elapsed after the filing of the proper papers, to start running the defendant's time to answer, as provided in rule 51. A judgment entered after personal service of a defendant within the State, but prior to the expiration of his time to answer, is an irregular and voidable, but not a void, judgment. (Harper v.Biles, 115 Penn. St. 594; Parker v. Linden,
13 N.Y. Supp. 787; Matter of Newman,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., CRANE, LEHMAN and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur; POUND and HUBBS, JJ., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.