Court Opinion

ID: 5412664
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 16:11:44.488393+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:30:52.406686
License: Public Domain

Blackmar, J.
The defendant moves to set aside the judgment herein on the ground that it was irregular in that no notice of the application therefor was given. The order to show cause upon which the motion was brought on for hearing contains, no prayer for any other relief. The question is, therefore, one of law as to whether the defendant was entitled to notice of the application for this judgment.
The summons was served without the complaint, 'but was accompanied with an injunction granted upon an affidavit which indicated that the cause of action was to enjoin the construction by the defendant of its railroad through certain streets without the consent of the property owners. The defendant obtained an order to show cause why the injunction should not be vacated. The affidavit upon which such order was based stated that Arthur Carter Hume was the attorney for the defendant and that his office and place of business was in the Times Building, Forty-second street and Broad*591way, borough of Manhattan, Hew York city. The papers were also indorsed with his name and address. The injunction was vacated and,, more than twenty days having expired since the service of the summons, the plaintiff applied for judgment under section 1214 of the Code, without notice; and a final judgment, enjoining the defendant from the construction of the road and directing a writ of inquiry to assess the damages, was granted. The defendant now claims that the service of the order to show cause was equivalent to a notice of appearance which entitled it to notice of all subsequent steps in the action. Whatever may have been the state of the law before the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure, as to whether a notice of motion was equivalent to an appearance which entitled the defendant to notice, it seems now to be well established that a notice of motion, and a fortiori an order to show cause, which is not subscribed by the attorney as is a notice of motion, is not such an appearance. Wood v. Furtick, 17 Misc. Rep. 561; Valentine v. Myers Sanitary Depot, 36 Hun, 201; Douglas v. Haberstro, 8 Abb. N. C. 230; Paine Lumber Co. v. Galbraith, 38 App. Div. 68; Cohen v. Levy, 27 Misc. Rep. 330. It was held in Noble v. Crandall, 49 Hun, 474, that the service of a notice of motion to set aside a judgment was not a general appearance but was a special appearance for the purposes of the motion, although the attorney did not qualify his appearance by stating upon the face of the papers that he appeared for the purposes of the motion only. Krause v. Averill, 66 How. Pr. 97, as I read it, is an authority only for the proposition that a valid order extending the time to answer may be made without service of a notice of appearance, and this proposition is also held in Littauer v. Stern, 177 N. Y. 233 ; but neither case holds that an application to the court to extend the time to answer is equivalent to an appearance under section 421 of the Code. I think that, under the present state of the authorities, it must be held that service of motion papers is an appearance for the purposes of the motion only and not a general appearance, such as confers jurisdiction if the defendant has not been served, or entitles the defendant to notice of subsequent proceedings if he has *592been served. It has been suggested by the attorney for the defendant that, as all the requirements of a notice of appearance are stated at some place, either in the body of the affidavit or in the indorsement on the papers, the service of the order to show cause should be held to be a general appearance. It seems to me more consistent with the authorities to hold that it is a special appearance for the purposes of the motion only. There is no statement anywhere in the papers that the defendant appears generally. It is stated in the affidavit of the defendant’s attorney upon which this motion is based that the affidavit read on the motion to vacate the injunction stated that the attorney who made the affidavit appeared for the defendant. This is not accurate, for such affidavit nowhere contains the statement that the defendant appears. If the defendant had not been served with the summons, it could hardly be claimed that, in the motion papers to set aside the injunction, there was expressed any intent to subject it generally to the jurisdiction of the court. Neither can there be found in those papers the expression of any intent to serve such a notice of appearance as is required by section 421 of the Code.
The motion must be denied, with ten dollars costs, but without prejudice to an application by the defendant to relieve itself from default in appearing.
Ordered accordingly.