DocketNumber: Appeal No. 1
Citation Numbers: 281 A.D.2d 42, 723 N.Y.S.2d 285
Judges: Kehoe
Filed Date: 3/21/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiffs obtained a money judgment against defendants in Ontario, Canada. Thereafter, plaintiffs sought recognition and enforcement of the Ontario judgment in New York, where defendants allegedly have assets. The issue before us is whether a judgment creditor must show a basis for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over a judgment debtor by a New York court before obtaining recognition and enforcement of a foreign country money judgment. We hold that the judgment debtor need not be subject to personal jurisdiction in New York before the judgment creditor may obtain recognition and enforcement of the foreign country money judgment, as neither the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution nor New York law requires that the New York court have a jurisdictional basis for proceeding against the judgment debtor.
I
All of the parties are Canadian. Plaintiff Michael Lenchyshyn is a resident of Ontario, Canada, and plaintiff Micro Furnace, Ltd. is chartered under the laws of Ontario. Defendant Kosta Pelonis is a citizen of Canada and resident of Taiwan, and defendant Pelko Electric, Inc. (Pelko Electric), of which Pelonis is president, director and sole shareholder, is an Ontario corporation, although apparently now defunct.
In the Ontario action, plaintiffs interposed counterclaims seeking to recover damages for defendants’ alleged infringement of plaintiffs’ trademark and patent rights in a certain ceramic disc furnace. Plaintiffs also alleged that defendants breached an agreement to pay royalties to plaintiffs in connection with defendants’ distribution of the furnace pursuant to a
Plaintiffs then commenced this action in Erie County, seeking recognition of the Ontario judgment pursuant to CPLR article 53. The action was brought on by notice of motion for summary judgment in lieu of complaint, pursuant to CPLR 3213 and 5303. The motion was supported by the affidavits of plaintiffs’ attorney and Lenchyshyn and copies of the Canadian judgment and appellate orders. Plaintiffs asserted that the Canadian court had jurisdiction over defendants and that its judgment was “final and conclusive” and remained unsatisfied. Plaintiffs alleged that they had made “unsuccessful attempts to execute on Defendant [s’] Canadian bank accounts” but that defendants had “transferred their funds” into foreign banks.
Upon commencing the action, plaintiffs were unable to serve defendants pursuant to CPLR 308 (1), (2), or (4). Plaintiffs moved for an order fashioning a method of service pursuant to CPLR 308 (5). By order granted April 21, 1999, Supreme Court allowed plaintiffs to effect service upon defendants by publication and by serving a Buffalo law firm that had represented ' defendants in certain litigation in the Western District of New York during the mid-1990’s.
Following service, defendants moved to dismiss the action for lack of personal jurisdiction. Defendants did not contest the manner of service, but contended that Pelonis was not a resident or domiciliary of New York, that Pelko Electric had ceased operations in 1990, that neither defendant was present in or doing or transacting business in New York, and that New York thus had no basis for assuming personal jurisdiction over defendants.
In opposition, plaintiffs submitted the affidavit of their attorney, who argued that the Canadian judgment met all requirements for recognition in New York. Plaintiffs disputed defendants’ assertions of lack of jurisdiction and alleged a
II
Supreme Court granted an order and judgment (appeal No. 1) and an order (appeal No. 2). The order and judgment denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the action for lack of any jurisdictional basis over defendants in New York; granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment; ordered that the Ontario judgment be recognized in New York pursuant to CPLR article 53; and authorized plaintiffs to take appropriate steps to enforce the judgment in New York. The order denied defendants’ motion to renew their motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. On appeal, defendants raise five contentions, all of which proceed from the premise that a valid basis for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over defendants in New York is a prerequisite to recognition and enforcement of the Ontario money judgment in New York under CPLR article 53.
III
CPLR article 53 is New York’s version of the “Uniform Foreign Country Money-Judgments Recognition Act” (see, CPLR 5308, 5309). It codifies common-law principles applicable to recognition of foreign country judgments (see, Overseas Dev. Bank in Liquidation v Nothmann, 103 AD2d 534, 538,
IV
Defendants have not challenged their amenability to the jurisdiction of the Ontario court or the fundamental fairness of Ontario’s system of justice and court procedures, and thus we have no need to address the strict requirements for recognition set forth in CPLR 5304 (a) (1) or (2). Nor have defendants
Defendants nonetheless argue that New York may not recognize the Ontario money judgment, and that plaintiffs may not enforce it against defendants in New York, unless defendants have an actual current presence within the State or unless there is some other basis for New York’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over defendants. Indeed, defendants contend that Supreme Court erred even in entertaining the CPLR article 53 proceeding because defendants are not currently subject to personal jurisdiction in New York. We conclude, however, that a party seeking recognition in New York of a foreign money judgment (whether of a sister state or a foreign country) need not establish a basis for the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the judgment debtor by the New York courts. No such requirement can be found in the CPLR, and none inheres in the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution, from which jurisdictional basis requirements derive.
The sole authority cited in support of defendants’ assertion that a jurisdictional basis is required in the recognizing state (as opposed to in the rendering state or country) is the case of Biel v Boehm (94 Misc 2d 946, 948-949 [Sup Ct, Suffolk County]). As support for that proposition, Biel (supra, at 950-951) cites a footnote in the landmark case of Shaffer v Heitner (433 US 186, 210, n 36). In fact, the footnote supports the contrary conclusion. It reads:
“Once it has been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the defendant is a debtor of the plaintiff, there would seem to be no unfairness in allowing an action to realize on that debt in a State where the defendant has property, whether*48 or not that State would have jurisdiction to determine the existence of the debt as an original matter” (Shaffer v Heitner, supra, at 210, n 36 [emphasis supplied]).
Those courts that have cited the Shaffer footnote have held uniformly that no jurisdictional basis for proceeding against the judgment debtor need be shown before a foreign judgment will be recognized or enforced in a given state (see, Breezevale Ltd. v Dickinson, 262 AD2d 248; Fine v Spierer, 109 AD2d 611, 612; First v State of Montana, Dept. of Social & Rehabilitation Servs., 247 Mont 465, 474-475, 808 P2d 467, 472-473; Bank of Babylon v Quirk, 192 Conn 447, 450, 472 A2d 21, 22-23; Huggins v Deinhard, 134 Ariz 98, 101-103, 654 P2d 32, 35-37; Williamson v Williamson, 247 Ga 260, 262-263, 275 SE2d 42, 44-45, cert denied 454 US 1097; Berger v Berger, 138 Vt 367, 369-370, 417 A2d 921, 922; Black v Black, 119 RI 127, 140, 377 A2d 1308, 1315; Tabet v Tabet, 644 So 2d 557, 559 [Fla]; Fraser v Littlejohn, 96 NC App 377, 379-381, 386 SE2d 230, 232-233; Ruiz v Lloses, 233 NJ Super 608, 610-611, 559 A2d 866, 867; Gingold v Gingold, 161 Cal App 3d 1177, 1183, 208 Cal Rptr 123, 126; Hexter v Hexter, 179 Ind App 638, 639, 386 NE2d 1006, 1007; Kingsland Holdings v Bracco, 1996 WL 104257, * 6 [Del Ct of Ch]; UMS Partners v Jackson, 1995 WL 413395, * 2-3 [Del Super Ct]; Sagona v Doty, 25 Va Cir 529; cf., State ex rel. Dept. of Revenue v Control Data Corp., 300 Ore 471, 475-476, 713 P2d 30, 32; see generally, Kulko v Superior Ct., 436 US 84, 95, n 9 [and accompanying text], reh denied 438 US 908). Only one case other than the aforementioned Biel decision holds to the contrary, and it does so without referring to the Shaffer principle (see, Mori v Mori, 896 P2d 1237, 1239-1240 [Utah Ct App], revd on other grounds 931 P2d 854 [Utah]). While we recognize that the foregoing cases, like the Shaffer footnote, concern the recognition and enforcement of sister state judgments, we conclude that the same principle applies to recognition and enforcement of foreign country money judgments (see, Mandel-Mantello v Treves, 79 AD2d 569, revg 103 Misc 2d 700; Rich v Rich, 93 Misc 2d 409, 411-412; see also, CPLR 5101; cf., CPLR 6201 [5]; contra, Parada Jimenez v Mobil Oil Co. de Venezuela, 1991 WL 64186, * 2-4, 1991 US Dist LEXIS 4996 [SD NY, Apr. 18, 1991]).
V
There is no mention in CPLR article 53 of any requirement of personal jurisdiction over the judgment debtor in New York,
VI
Considerations of logic, fairness, and practicality dictate that a judgment creditor be permitted to obtain recognition and enforcement of a foreign country money judgment without any showing that the judgment debtor is subject to personal jurisdiction in New York. In proceeding under article 53, the judgment creditor does not seek any new relief against the judgment debtor, but instead merely asks the court to perform its ministerial function of recognizing the foreign country money judgment and converting it into a New York judgment. Moreover, it is not inevitable or even likely that any enforcement device ultimately employed by the judgment creditor will operate against the judgment debtor in personam. Most devices for the enforcement of money judgments operate in rem against the real or personal property of the judgment debtor, or in personam against third parties, such as banks, investment firms, employers, or other third-party garnishees, obligors or
Moreover, although defendants assert that they currently have no assets in New York, that assertion has no relation to their jurisdictional objection. Besides, if that assertion -vyere true, it would be difficult to understand why defendants have so adamantly opposed the recognition of the Ontario judgment in New York. In any event, plaintiffs sufficiently allege that defendants have assets in New York. In particular, it is alleged that defendants maintain bank accounts in Buffalo and that Pelonis is a principal in a New York corporation (one formed apparently to carry out what formerly had been the business of Pelko Electric). Plaintiffs should be given the opportunity to enforce the Ontario judgment by levying against whatever assets of defendants may be held by New York banks or whatever debts (i.e., salary, commissions or dividends) may be owed to Pelonis by the New York corporation. Such assets and/or debts would have a New York situs, which is all that is required to subject them to levy or restraint here as a means of enforcing the domesticated Ontario judgment (see generally, Breezevale Ltd. v Dickinson, supra, at 248; Fine v Spierer, supra, at 612; Mandel-Mantello v Treves, supra; Rich v Rich, supra, at 412). Moreover, even if defendants do not presently have assets in New York, plaintiffs nevertheless should be granted recognition of the foreign country money judgment pursuant to CPLR article 53, and thereby should have the opportunity to pursue all such enforcement steps in futuro, whenever it might appear that defendants are maintaining assets in New York, including at any time during the initial life of the domesticated Ontario money judgment or any subsequent renewal period (see generally, CPLR 211 [a]; 5014).
At bottom, defendants take the illogical and inequitable position that a judgment debtor’s New York assets should be immune from execution or restraint so long as the judgment debtor absents himself from New York, no difficult trick in this day of telecommuting and banking and investing by telephone or wire or over the Internet. Requiring that the judgment debtor have a “presence” in or some other jurisdictional nexus to the state of enforcement would unduly protect a judgment debtor and enable him easily to escape his just obligations under a foreign country money judgment. For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that it is not essential to recognition
VII
Accordingly, the order and judgment in appeal No. 1 and the order in appeal No. 2 should be affirmed.
Pigott, Jr., P. J., Pine, Hurlbutt and Lawton, JJ., concur.
Order and judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.
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