Court Opinion

ID: 5179968
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 04:40:46.647359+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:32.145579
License: Public Domain

Willard Bartlett, J.:
The learned counsel for the appellant concedes that an order of publication need not contain both the requirement, that the summons shall be published and the provision that service may be made without the State, at the option of the plaintiff. (Matter of Field, 131 N. Y. 184.) He insists, however, that when the plaintiff makes no election between the two modes of service, but inserts both provisions in the order, the omission to specify a place to which copies of the summons, complaint and order shall be directed, addressed to the defendant, is a jurisdictional defect which is fatal to the order.
It does not seem to us that this view is correct. No doubt the order (of publication in the present case was defective, in that it merely provided for the mailing of the papers “directed to said defendants” without specifying any place to'which they were to be addressed. But inasmuch as everything relating to the publication and mailing might "have been omitted without affecting the validity of that part of the order which authorized the personal service of the summons without the "State, we do not see how the omission of one thing relating to such publication and mailing can invalidate it. The order remained perfect as an order permitting the plaintiff to have the summons served upon the defendant personally outside the limits of New York, and the summons was so served, in the State of Connecticut, on the 25th day of October, 1895.
The order of publication was made more than thirty days before that date and a warrant of attachment had also been granted against the property of the defendant more than thirty days before. *98Section 638 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is contained in the title relating to the provisional remedy of attachment, prescribes that personal service of the summons must be made upon the defendant against whose property an attachment is granted within thirty days after the granting thereof; or else, before the expiration of the same time, service of the summons by publication must be commenced or service thereof must be. made without the State' pursuant to an order obtained therefor. There was no attempt to publish the summons in the case at bar* but it was served in Connecticut pursuant to the order, as already stated. We do not think that the lapse of more than thirty days had any effect upon the service of the summons without the State or upon the order authorizing such service. The effect of the delay was limited to the attachment, which the defendant thereupon became entitled to have vacated. The service of the summons without the State would have been perfectly good although there had been no-attachment whatever. The Code, in the provisions relating to attachment, nowhere declares that the action shall abate or the court be ousted of jurisdiction by reason of a delay of more than thirty days in the personal service of the' summons or the beginning of the publication thereof; and in the absence of such a provision in express terms we can perceive no good, reason for extending the effect of the omission beyond the avoidance of the attachment.
The order appealed from must be affirmed, with- costs.
All concurred, except Cullen, J., not sitting.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.