Nurenberg v. Keith

101 Misc. 551
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 101 Misc. 551 (Nurenberg v. Keith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nurenberg v. Keith, 101 Misc. 551 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Ordway, J.

The plaintiff, claiming to have made a contract with the defendants for the sale to them of a quantity of denims,” commenced an action against the defendants for damages for failure to deliver according to contract, by obtaining a warrant of attachment against the defendants as non-residents, and levying upon a certain account due to defendants in New York city. The only service of the summons, complaint and other papers was by delivery thereof to the debtor of the defendants in accordance with section 48 of the Municipal Court Code, which is as follows

Immediately upon making the inventory, the marshal must serve the summons, if it has not yet been served, together with the warrant of attachment and [553]*553inventory, upon the defendant by delivering to him personally a copy of each, if he can with reasonable diligence be found within the city, or, if he cannot be so found, by leaving a copy of each, certified by the marshal, at the last place of residence of the defendant in the city, with a person of suitable age and discretion, or, if such person cannot be found there, by posting them on the outer door, and also depositing another copy of each in the postoffice, inclosed in a sealed post-paid wrapper, directed to the defendant at his residence; or, if the defendant has no place of residence in. the city, by delivering them to the person in whose possession the property attached is found.
“ If personal. service of the summons upon the defendant has previously been made, the marshal must serve the warrant and inventory as herein provided. ’ ’

No other service or notice appears to have been made or given to the defendants and they not appearing plaintiff entered judgment against them for the amount demanded in the complaint, with costs, and collected the attached account and applied it in satisfaction of the judgment.

Defendants, learning of these proceedings, four days after the entry of judgment, made a motion to vacate the warrant of attachment and the judgment, on the ground that the papers on which the attachment was granted were insufficient and that the judgment was obtained without due process of law in that there was no service on, or notice .to, the defendants in any form.

The attachment was granted and property attached June 29, 1917, and at the same time the attachment papers were served on the defendants’ debtor only. The recital in the findings and order for the entry of judgment of the justice, which were signed July 16, [554]*5541917, shows that an inqnest was taken and judgment was entered on that day. On July seventeenth the attached property was levied on by the marshal under an execution and the attached account paid by the defendants’ debtor to the marshal who, on the same day, returned the execution satisfied.

On July 20,1917, defendants served notice of motion to vacate the attachment and judgment. The service of the papers on the defendants’ debtor was made under the last clause of the 1st paragraph of section 48 of the Municipal Court Code. The certificate of service, found at page 10a of the record, shows such service and says that it was made “ for the reason that said defendants have no residence and cannot be found in said city ” (New York). This method of service seems to be within the strict letter of the Municipal Court Code, but in my opinion that section is unconstitutional, in so far as it does not provide for notice to the defendant, but permits judgment to be entered against a non-resident upon the mere service of process upon a person in whose possession his property is found, as it does not comply with the ‘1 due process ” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and section 6 of article 1 of the Constitution of the state of New York. In Martin v. Central Vermont R. R. Co., 50 Hun, 347, the court said, at page 350, in condemning a similar Vermont statute: “It seems hardly necessary to argue that a judgment which deprives a man of his property cannot lawfully .be recovered without notice to him. We do not mean that against absent debtors the law may not authorize an attachment of the alleged debtor’s property. It may thereby acquire jurisdiction of the thing; but in order to make that jurisdiction perfect it must give due notice to the owner before it attempts to divest his title. The. attachment of the [555]*555property is only one step; another and equally important step is the notice to the owner. (Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 403; Buchanan v. Rucher, 9 East, 192; Fenton v. Garlick, 8 Johns. 194.) Such is the rule in proceedings strictly in rem, to which what is known as foreign attachment is analogous.. Now, while it is true that this notice to the owner need not be personal, as he is out of the State, yet it must be, as said in the quotation above, ‘adapted to the nature of the case.’ If it be said that it rests with the legislature of the State in which the attachment is issued to declare what shall be a sufficient notice, the answer is that that may be so, provided there is a reasonable and bona fide provision for giving notice. But certainly a legislature cannot enact that no notice need be given, or make that a notice which is no notice at all. To do that would be a fraud on the Constitution.

“ Now, in the present case, there was no notice whatever to Martin and no attempt to give him notice. Process was issued and served on the railroad company, his debtor, and on no one else. To serve a notice on a man's debtor is no notice to the man of a claim} against him. The debtor is in no sense his agent. And, if there were a statute of Vermont declaring it to be unnecessary to give any notice to the alleged debtor whose property is to be taken, such a statute could not be valid against this constitutional provision. A State cannot make that due process of law which is not such. If a State can declare that service on a man’s debtor is due process of law under which his property can be taken away, then it can dispense with any service of any kind whatever. The constitutional amendment aims, among other things, to guard all the citizens of all the States from any such injustice.”

In People ex rel. Simpson Co. v. Kempner, 154 App. [556]*556-Div. 674, the court said, page 677: “ So carefully have the courts guarded this constitutional and sacred right of the citizen, that statutes omitting this required essential have uniformly been condemned, even where it appeared, as it does in this case, that the party proceeded against was permitted, through the courtesy of the court, to have and did have notice of the proceeding and opportunity to be heard. It is not enough that a person may by chance have notice, or that he may as a matter of favor or courtesy have a hearing; the law itself to be constitutional must require notice and .give a right to a hearing. It matters not upon the question of the constitutionality of such law that the questions involved have been fairly decided. The essential validity of the law is to be tested, not by what has been done under it, but by what may by its authority be done. (Stuart v. Palmer, 74 N. Y. 183,188; Gilman v. Tucker, 128 id. 190, 200; Coxe v. State, 144 id. 396, 408; Colon v. Lisk, 153 id. 188,194.) ” See also Windsor v. McVeigh, 93 U. S. 274; Roller v.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Misc. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nurenberg-v-keith-nyappterm-1917.