SHANE, A CO-DEFENDANT WITH HIS PARENTS WITH WHOM HE LIVED, WAS NOT DISQUALIFIED FROM ACCEPTING SERVICE ON BEHALF OF HIS PARENTS DUE TO A CONFLICT OF INTEREST; THE ACTION AGAINST THE PARENTS SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN VACATED BASED ON A LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the evidence did not support the finding that Shane, who was living with his parents when he was served with process on behalf of his parents, was not a person of suitable age and discretion due to a conflict of interest with his parents. Shane was a co-defendant along with his parents. The parents were granted vacatur under CPLR 5015(a)(4) on the ground the court lacked personal jurisdiction over them:
“A person would not be considered a person of suitable age and discretion where their interests in the proceeding were sufficiently adverse to the party for whom they were accepting service” … . Furthermore, “[g]ood faith is implicit in the spirit of the statutory scheme. If a plaintiff knows, or should know, that service according to [CPLR 308 (2)] will not afford notice, then, by definition, it is not reasonably calculated to afford notice, and is constitutionally infirm” … .
… [T]here is no evidence in the record to support a determination that plaintiff was aware, or should have been aware, of any alleged conflict between Shane and the parent defendants. We cannot conclude that Shane had a conflict of interest with the parent defendants and, therefore, was not a person of suitable age and discretion, merely because he is a codefendant … . Moreover, on the record before us, we note that this is not a case where plaintiff can be charged with any knowledge that service upon Shane with respect to his parents might be deficient … . Thus, based on the evidence adduced at the traverse hearing, we conclude that plaintiff established that Shane was a person of suitable age and discretion for purposes of serving his parents … . Seebald v Spoonley, 2025 NY Slip Op 04324, Fourth Dept 7-25-25
Practice Point: The fact that a person is a co-defendant does not render that person unqualified to accept service on behalf of other defendants. Here the person served, Shane, a co-defendant in the action, accepted service on behalf of his parents with whom he lived. It was not demonstrated at the traverse hearing that Shane had interests sufficiently adverse to those of his parents to render the service on the parents constitutionally infirm. There was no evidence the plaintiff was aware service upon Shane would be deficient with respect to service on the parents.
