Court Opinion

ID: 5418845
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 16:23:41.046565+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:08.754643
License: Public Domain

Cunningham, J.
This action is brought to recover possession of a chattel sold to the defendant upon a conditional contract of sale. The purchase price was $1,600, $45 remaining unpaid thereon.
The summons and complaint were served upon the defendant in a cell in the Geneva police station where he had been taken because of his violent insanity, although he had never been judicially declared to be incompetent. He died the next day in the Willard State Hospital. The plaintiff now seeks to continue this action against the administrator of the estate of the deceased defendant.
The court has power to require the summons to be served upon a designated person when it has reason to believe that the defendant is “mentally incapable,” although he has not been judicially declared to be so. Civ. Pr. Act, § 226.
The person so designated shall represent the incompetent and protect his interests. American Mortgage Co. v. Dewey, 106 App. Div. 389.
It cannot be believed that it was the intention of the legislature, when enacting the Civil Practice Act, to permit an action to be commenced against an incompetent merely by leaving a summons with him. The decedent did not have sufficient mental capacity to understand the meaning or effect of the papers left with him or to take steps to settle or defend the action. Certainly, under these circumstances, it was incumbent upon the court to require the summons to be served upon some other person before the service became complete and jurisdiction of the defendant acquired. The proper practice in such cases is to apply to the court for *779an order designating some person upon whom the summons shall be served. Without such an order and compliance therewith, and without also delivering the summons to the defendant personally, the service of the summons is not complete. O’Brien v. O’Brien, 38 N. Y. Supp. 157; American Mortgage Co. v. Dewey, supra; Bernstein v. Bernstein, 188 App. Div. 276.
The motion is denied, the service of the summons is set aside and the requisition to replevy is vacated, with ten dollars costs.
Ordered accordingly.