Long Island Trust Co. v. Rosenberg

82 A.D.2d 591, 442 N.Y.S.2d 563, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11835
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 8, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 82 A.D.2d 591 (Long Island Trust Co. v. Rosenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long Island Trust Co. v. Rosenberg, 82 A.D.2d 591, 442 N.Y.S.2d 563, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11835 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lazer, J.P.

The issue here is whether the current provisions of the Judiciary Law permit civil contempt proceedings to be instituted by service of a notice of motion by ordinary mail upon an alleged contemnor who is not a party to the underlying action in which the contempt is claimed to have been committed. We conclude that such service is insufficient and that the recent amendments to sections 756 and 761 of the Judiciary Law have not altered the pre-existing requirement that such civil contempt proceedings be com[592]*592menced in the same fashion as subdivisions (c) and (d) of CPLR 403 require for special proceedings.

The current dispute derives from a supplementary pro-, ceeding brought by Long Island Trust Company (the bank) to enforce a default judgment it had obtained in Suffolk County against Alfred and Renee Rosenberg in May of 1977. The bank subsequently learned that Mrs. Rosenberg had died in January of 1977 and that the Rosenbergs convéyed their residence to third parties only days before her death. In an effort to acquire information concerning that conveyance, the bank, inter alia, served an information subpoena upon the law firm of Semon & Braverman which had been Mrs. Rosenberg’s employer and had represented the Rosenbergs in the action which led to the judgment. The subpoena was served by certified mail, return receipt requested, as authorized by CPLR 5224 (subd [a], par 3).

When Semon & Braverman failed to respond to the subpoena, the bank applied to the Nassau County Court, from which the subpoena had issued, to hold the members of the law firm in contempt of court (see CPLR 5251, 5210). The notice of motion which initiated the contempt proceeding was served on the law firm by ordinary mail.

At first, the County Court denied the bank’s application. Upon renewal, however, the court found the members of Semon & Braverman in contempt for their failure to respond to the information subpoena and rejected the defense that service of the motion by ordinary mail was defective. The court held that personal jurisdiction over the firm had been obtained by service of the information subpoena and that service of the contempt motion by ordinary mail was permitted by section 756 of the Judiciary Law and the Nassau County Court rules. Nevertheless, Semon & Braverman was afforded an opportunity to purge the contempt and to raise any other defenses to the proceeding. After further motions failed to convince the court that it had erred either legally or factually, Semon & Braverman ultimately filed its response to the subpoena but the court found the argument that the firm had no knowledge of the subpoena unpersuasive and refused to vacate the contempt order.

[593]*593On appeal the Appellate Term reversed the orders in issue and denied the motion to hold Semon & Braverman in contempt. The court limited its review to the question of jurisdiction and found that personal jurisdiction over the firm, as a third-party witness, had not been acquired through service of the notice of motion by ordinary mail. Leave to appeal to this court was granted by the Appellate Term.

Disposition of the current controversy depends upon interpretation of two recently amended sections of the Judiciary Law when viewed against the historical context from which they emerged. The sections now read as follows:

“§ 756. Application to punish for contempt; procedure

“An application to punish for a contempt punishable civilly may be commenced by notice of motion returnable before the court or judge authorized to punish for the offense, or by an order of such court or judge requiring the accused to show cause before it, or him, at a time and place therein specified, why the accused should not be punished for the alleged offense. The application shall be noticed, heard and determined in accordance with the procedure for a motion on notice in an action in such court, provided, however, that, except as provided in section fifty-two hundred fifty of the civil practice law and rules or unless otherwise ordered by the court, the moving papers shall be served no less than ten and no more than thirty days before the time at which the application is noticed to be heard. The application shall contain on its face a notice that the purpose of the hearing is to punish the accused for a contempt of court, and that such punishment may consist of fine or imprisonment, or both, according to law together with the following legend printed or type written in a size equal to at least eight point bold type:

“warning:
“your failure to appear in court may result in your
IMMEDIATE ARREST AND IMPRISONMENT FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT.”
“§ 761. Notice to accused; service
“An application ta punish for contempt in a civil contempt proceeding shall be served upon the accused, unless [594]*594service upon the attorney for the accused be ordered by the court or judge.”

In arguing that ordinary mail service of the notice of motion sufficed to commence the contempt proceeding, the bank relies upon the language in section 756 that the application “shall be noticed, heard and determined” in accordance with the motion procedure in the hearing court. Semon & Braverman bases its argument that a higher form of notice was required upon distinctions between contemnors who are parties to the underlying main action and those who are not (see Rosenberg v Rosenberg, 259 NY 338). The law firm thus argues that the distinction between party and nonparty contemnors has been continued in the new statutory scheme through the retention of the requirement in section 761 that the application “be served upon the accused” unless service on the accused’s attorney be ordered.

Sections 756 and 761 of the Judiciary Law were revised in 1977 (L 1977, ch 437, §§ 2, 4) as part of a series of amendments designed to overhaul the basic procedural mechanisms governing civil contempt proceedings as a result of a three-Judge Federal District Court judgment declaring the Judiciary Law provisions relative to civil contempts unconstitutional and enjoining their enforcement (Vail v Quinlan, 406 F Supp 951, revd on abstention grounds sub nom. Juidice v Vail, 430 US 327). The features of New York contempt practice found violative of due process by the District Court included the availability of a contempt remedy and warrant of imprisonment solely on the basis of a creditor’s affidavit and ex parte proceeding (see Judiciary Law, former § 756), the inadequacy of the provision for notice of the consequences of failure to appear, subjection to possible imprisonment without informing the alleged contemnor of his right to counsel, and use of fine and imprisonment as penal, rather than remedial or coercive, sanctions. The subsequent remodeling of the contempt provisions unquestionably had as its primary purpose cure of the possible constitutional infirmities raised by the Federal court determination (but see Walker v Walker, 51 AD2d 1029 [preamendment judicial cure oí Vail objections]). Resolution of the current controversy, how[595]*595ever, requires more than examination of the 1977 legislative process, for the provisions in current issue have only a tangential relationship to the Vail objections. History is more illuminating.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A.D.2d 591, 442 N.Y.S.2d 563, 1981 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-island-trust-co-v-rosenberg-nyappdiv-1981.