Expressway Village, Inc. v. Denman
Expressway Village, Inc. v. Shirley Denman
Attorneys
APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL, Anthony D. Parone for appellant. Shirley Denman, respondent pro se.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellant here questions a decision of the Town of Niagara Justice Court (Civil Part, Teixeira, J.), rendered on May 20, 2009, in which the trial court granted this petitioner landlord a default judgment awarding an eviction order, but denied a money judgment because the respondent had been served by conspicuous ānail and mailā process, rather than personal service.
The standard of review in this civil action, where County Court sits as the intermediate appellate court, is said to be as broad as that of the Appellate Division, enabling a full power to review all questions of law, questions of fact and exercises of judicial discretion addressed by the justice court. (See UJCA 1701, 1702 [d]; 1703 [a]; 1706; CPLR 5501 [c]; 5703 [b].)
The appellant is represented by counsel, who properly filed the notice of appeal, perfected that appeal, submitted the record on appeal and tendered his written appellate brief. As a result, this court opened an appeal file and sent its customary initial letter to the appellee advising her of the procedures and time deadlines involved. That letter, mailed on September 16, 2009, went to āShirley Denman, Lot No. 44, Expressway Village, 2740 Service Road, Niagara Falls, NY 14304,ā the last address noted in the courtās file. Sent by ordinary mail, it creates a legal presumption of receipt, since it was never returned to the court as undeliverable. (See Spangenberg v Chaloupka, 229 AD2d 482 [2d Dept 1996].)
Further corroborating that legal presumption are the following two facts. First is this courtās receipt, on October 20, 2009, of a responding letter purportedly signed by Shirley Denman and her daughter-in-law, Annette Lively. Second, these chambers received a telephone inquiry, on October 14, 2009, from attorney Jeffrey Marion, who indicated that he had been retained by Shirley Denman to represent her on this appeal, he had talked with Attorney Parone (representing the appellant) and they had agreed to a 30-day extension of time to file Ms. Denmanās appellate brief. Attorney Marion was directed to send a confirming letter, copied to Attorney Parone, in which event the court would
This appeal raises the solitary issue of whether the trial court has the power in a summary proceeding under the New York Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law to enter a money judgment against a respondent who defaults after receiving a petition and notice of petition by substituted or conspicuous, rather than personal, service.
As ably articulated in the appellantās brief, this issue has a long, counterintuitive and interesting history in the courts of this state. It is asserted, and this court accepts, that the authorities indicate the existence of a black letter rule of law in New York prohibiting entry of a money judgment for rents owed unless the tenant was personally served. (See for example Bogle, Dobiel, Liotti and Morris, Village, Town and District Courts in New York, Summary Proceedings, ch 12, §§ 12:94, 12:95 [Thomson-West 2008].) Most of the modern cases cite, as the origination of that ārule,ā the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, case of Matter of McDonald (Hutter) (225 App Div 403 [4th Dept 1929]), although ā in truth ā this āruleā long predated that case. (See for example Brambir v Seifert, 127 Misc 603 [App Term, 1st Dept 1926].)
The McDonald case was largely based upon the holding in the United States Supreme Court case of Pennoyer v Neff (95 US 714 [1877]). Essentially, the courtsā concerns in both cases revolved around the Fourteenth Amendment due process right to adequate and sufficient notice and the proper means by which a court acquires personal jurisdiction over a respondent in order to lawfully justify entering a binding judgment against him. Essentially, these early cases discussed the parameters of constitutionally appropriate notice, holding that a plaintiff must use ādue diligenceā to ascertain and personally serve a prospective respondent, permitting resort to substituted forms of service only where due diligence fails to locate that party. (See Mullane v Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 US 306 [1950].)
At least one court has ruled that due diligence should be a court determination made in advance; and, if so found, would constitutionally permit the use of substituted service (Callen v
A powerful argument was made by Judge Kenneth Gartner in Ressa Family v Dorfman (193 Misc 2d 315 [Nassau Dist Ct 2002]) that the McDonald rule should no longer apply (because the legislative and constitutional underpinnings of that earlier case had long since evaporated). While he invited specific legislative or appellate court action to explicitly āoverruleā McDonald, Judge Gartner felt constrained by the doctrine of stare decisis to continue application of the McDonald rule prohibiting the entry of a money judgment when there was no personal service upon the respondent.
The following year, Judge Gerald Lebovits essentially purported to āoverruleā McDonald and held that a court acquires personal jurisdiction over a defaulting tenant when the petition and notice of petition are served in a summary proceeding using conspicuous place service after due diligence in attempting personal delivery or substituted service, thereby entitling the petitioner to a money judgment upon the tenantās default of appearance. (See Dolan v Linnen, 195 Misc 2d 298 [Civ Ct, Richmond County 2003].)
Almost immediately, Judge Gartner responded to the Dolan decision, making it unmistakably clear that while he agreed with the legal result (also believing that the holding in McDonald no longer correctly reflected the evolved state of constitutional law, just as he had indicated in Ressa), he adamantly disagreed with the power of a lower court to ignore stare decisis and āoverruleā the explicit holding of a binding, higher court. (See Arnold v Lyons, 2003 NY Slip Op 50766[U] [2003].)
In 2004 and 2007, two additional lower courts tracked the holding in Dolan, further undercutting McDonald and simply sidestepping the concern about stare decisis. Indeed, these cases
With that as the existing state of affairs, had this court sat as the nisi prius court, I would have felt constrained, as Judge Teixeira (and Judge Gartner before him, in Ressa and Arnold), to apply the de facto discredited ā but not legally overruledā Appellate Division, Fourth Department, holding in McDonald and deny a money judgment for the lack of personal service in the instant case.
However, this court presently sits as the intermediate appellate court. For these purposes and in this case, that essentially means that I sit as the Appellate Division. For that reason, it seems to me that I have the power to accept or reject the McDonald holding, since stare decisis does not prevent a court of coequal legal stature from rejecting outmoded earlier precedent emanating from its own level in the hierarchical court system.
I do not take such action lightly or comfortably. Several factors existing here have convinced me that it is, however, the correct thing to do.
First and foremost, for the reasons coherently stated in all of the cases cited herein, the legal āruleā enunciated in McDonald appears to be untenable and incorrect. To this court it appears historically unlikely that the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, would follow its own holding were the matter ever to come before it again. I do not say this because I am so presumptuous as to imagine my powers of intellect to surpass that of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, or that I have any reliable means of predicting how they might decide. Rather, I recognize the overwhelming unanimity of the rulings since 1960, which all agree that McDonald no longer correctly reflects the law on this subject. I agree with observations made elsewhere that the relatively small value of these types of cases makes it economically impracticable for nonindigent, pay-as-they-go litigants to appeal these decisions to the Appellate Division, Fourth Department. That anomaly ought not to continue binding us to clearly bad law. Such simply cannot be justice.
Second, I note that an appellate court has spoken on this issue since August 15, 2007, when the Laskey ruling was delivered. While not from the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, and, thus, not able to overrule McDonald (which remains binding upon lower courts in this Department), this case does represent a three-judge appellate panelās unanimous and
Third, and lastly, this court is mindful of the fact that should my ruling here overstep my authority ā even sitting as the intermediate appellate level court ā this decision is appealable to the Appellate Division, Fourth Department. (See UJCA 1706; CPLR 5501 [c]; 5703 [b].) Thus, if I am wrong and have unwittingly offended their judicial prerogative, they will be afforded the opportunity to correct my mistake and, in the process, themselves revisit the McDonald ruling.
For all of these reasons, I hold that Avgush got it right. Money judgments are available to a landlord in a summary proceeding, provided that the record demonstrates that the service actually employed was legally sufficient to support the entry of a money judgment in a plenary action. This means that the clear language employed by the Legislature in RPAPL 735 (1) means exactly what it says. Service may be made in potentially one of three ways: personal service (directly upon the respondent); substituted service (directly upon some other person of suitable age and discretion residing or employed at the same address); or conspicuous ānail and mailā service (effected by affixing a copy
Four further caveats should be noted.
First, in order to bypass personal service and employ either of these alternative methods of service, the petitioner must first demonstrate that reasonable application (and due diligence, an even stronger showing, will certainly satisfy this lesser standard) was employed to try and personally serve the respondent and such efforts were unsuccessful. (See Eight Assoc. v Hynes, 102 AD2d 746 [1st Dept 1984].) This requires at least two (reasonable application), if not three or more (due diligence), reasonable attempts to effect personal service before resort to alternative methods (Dolan v Linnen, 195 Misc 2d 298, 325 [Civ Ct, Richmond County 2003]). Although the trial court did not address this issue, since neither reasonable application nor due diligence were considered important at that time, such due diligence (and, hence, reasonable application) appears, in this record on appeal, to have been made, as the affidavit of service (appellate record at 11) notes attempts made on March 11, 2009 at 1:25 p.m., March 11, 2009 at 6:20 p.m., and March 12, 2009 at 8:15 a.m. That, however, is a factual determination best left to the trial court to decide in the initial instance.
Second, in order to be legally effective, such alternative methods of service, whether by substituted service or conspicuous service, must also be accompanied by a timely dual mailing. Within one business day after such alternative service is employed, the petitioner must mail a copy of the notice of petition and petition to the respondent both by registered or certified mail and by regular first class mail. (See RPAPL 735 [1]; de Winter and Loeb, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyās Cons Laws of NY, Book 4972, RPAPL 735 [1].) There is no indication in this appellate record whether that was ever done.
Third, in order to secure a money judgment for attorney fees and other incidental expenses beyond traditional rent owed, the petitioner must demonstrate that there was a contractual basis for recovery of such damages as rent. This is because RPAPL only authorizes recovery in justice court of the physical property and ārentā owed. (See UJCA 204; RPAPL 701, 741; Colonial Plaza Corp. v Steele, 13 Misc 3d 1230[A], 2006 NY Slip Op 52065[U] [2006]; Henry v Simon, 24 Misc 3d 132[A], 2009 NY Slip Op 51369[U] [2009]; Acierno v Faldich, 4 Misc 3d 98 [App Term, 2d Dept 2004]; Matter of Bedford Gardens Co. v Silber
Finally, mention is made of the lease (contract) provision found on page 12 of the appellate record, that being paragraph 1 (d). This clause appears to establish a respondent/lessee deposit, which the trial court may need to consider as a possible offset against any money judgment that might be awarded to the petitioner/lessor by the trial court on this remand.
For all of the above reasons, that portion of Judge Teixeiraās decision which granted petitioner an order of eviction is affirmed, that portion of his decision which denied the entry of a money judgment because of the lack of personal service is reversed, and the matter is returned to Justice Court so that the petitioner ā upon notice to the respondent ā may factually demonstrate to the trial court the existence of due diligence (or, at least, reasonable application) and compliance with the dual mailing requirements of RPAPL 735 (1). In the event that petitioner is able to demonstrate to the trial court that reasonable application or due diligence was employed and that the proper dual mailings were made, a money judgment may be entered despite the lack of personal service.
No costs are awarded to the petitioner upon this appeal