Filed Date: 5/5/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Louis B. York, J.), entered April 11, 2008, which granted defendant Madison Square Garden, L.P.’s (MSG LP) motion to dismiss the complaint as against it, and sua sponte dismissed the complaint as against defendant Madison Square Garden Center, Inc. (MSG Center), unanimously affirmed, without costs.
Plaintiff slipped and fell in Madison Square Garden while attending a basketball game and filed a complaint naming MSG Center that was served on the Secretary of State pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 306. It appears that MSG Center, which once owned and managed the arena where plaintiff fell, is a foreign corporation that has not been authorized to do business in New York State since 1998, and that no attempt to serve MSG LP which has owned and managed the arena since 1998, was made until after the three-year statute of limitations had run. Plaintiffs, therefore, rely on the relation-back doctrine (CPLR 203 [c]) to argue that the timely service made on MSG Center should be deemed to have been service on MSG LE Such argument fails because MSG Center was not served pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 307, which sets forth procedures for serving an unauthorized foreign corporation that are jurisdictional and require “strict compliance” (Flick v Stewart-Warner Corp., 76 NY2d 50, 57 [1990]). Since plaintiffs argue that, for statute of limitations purposes, the service made on