
    John L. McCaulay, survivor, etc., Resp’t, v. Joseph R. Palmer, Appl’t.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed June 28, 1886.)
    
    1. Practice—Cóntbmft—Attachment for—What necessary before ORDER FOR CAN BE MADE—ON WHOM ORDER FOR MUST BE SERVED.
    Upon the return day of an order directing the defendant to appe-r and he examined as a witness, an application was made in his behalf to dismiss it. The decision was reserved from the 6th to the 14th of November by the justice presiding. On the 14th the motion was denied, and an" ■ order was then made requiring the defendant to appear on the 19th of November, pursuant to the preceding order for his examination. This second order was served on the attorney of defendant. Held, that an order of attachment i^ould not issue to bring defendant into court for contempt for disobeying the second order without the personal service upon him of the said second order and at the same time exhibiting to him the original. ■
    2. Same—Service of order to show cause, out op state a nullity.
    The service of the order to show cause why he should not be punished for disobeying the two orders out of the state of New York was a nullity and did not give the court authority to proceed.
    Appeal from an order directing an attachment to be issued to bring the defendant before the court to answer for his alleged disobedience of orders requiring him to appear and be examined as a witness, at the instance of the. plaintiff, before trial.
    
      G. Zabriskie, for app’lt; L. Laflin Kellogg, for resp’t.
   Daniels, J.

Upon the return day of the order directing the defendant to appear and submit to an examination as a witness, an application was made in his behalf to dismiss-it. The motion for that purpose was not then decided but it was retained by the justice presiding. at the court under consideration, from the 6th to the 14th of November, 1885, On the last day mentioned the. motion was denied, and an order was then made requiring the defendant to appear on the 19th of November, 1885, pursuant to the preceding order, for his examination. It has been affirmed in behalf of the. plaintiff that he did not appear personally at the time when the motion was made to vacate the first order. But the correctness of this statement was controverted by his attorney, in whose affidavit it is stated that he was personally present in court at the time when by the first order he was required to appear. It is not, however, necessary to decide whether he was personally present at that time or not, for he was not then required to be examined. Neither was his default taken for omitting to appear, if he was not in fact present. And when the second order was made, a different time was necessarily designated when he was required to appear and submit to the examination. This second order was served upon his attorneys, but it was not served upon him, and it was made in part the foundation of the order, from which the appeal has been taken, (Erecting the issuing of the attachment. That order depends, therefore, upon the second order made in the proceeding, and upon the defendant’s failure to comply with the direction contained in it requiring him to appear on the 19th of November. And as he is not shown to be in contempt, for the violation of the direction contained in the second order, the direction for the issuing of the attachment in the order from which the appeal has been taken cannot be sustained.

To bring a party into contempt it is the practice of the court to require the order which he is charged with violating to be served personally upon him. This is to be done by delivering to him a copy of the order, and at the same time exhibiting to him the original. The consequences of a contempt are serious, and often severe, in the punishment pronounced by the court, and before a party can be subjected to them, a strict compEance with the practice has been required to be observed. The object of the rule is to furnish the individual himself with an ample opportunity to understand the charge made against him, and to prepare to meet it as best he may. It is a sound, and salutary rule for the protection of the party, the observance of which cannot be dispensed with, and it has accordingly been held by the general term in this department that the order the party may be charged with violating, must be served personafiy to him before proceedings can be successfully instituted and carried on to punish him for the contempt arising out of its disobedience. Meyer v. Noll, 56 How., 214.

This rule was not complied with, and the order directing the attachment to issue was unauthorized. To enable the court to make such an order, as it proceeded in part upon each of the other orders, it was necessary to show that the defendant was in contempt for failing to comply with the second order, and that could only be done by making proof of personal service of the order upon him.

The order to show cause why he should not be punished for disobeying the two orders requiring him to appear and be examined was served upon him at New Brunswick, in the state of New Jersey. This service, under the circumstance, was a substantial nullity, supplying the court with no authority to proceed in any manner upon it. Litchfield v. Burwell, 5 How., 341-346.

As the order directed the attachment to issue, which might have been made without notice, this failure to make legal service of the order to show cause would not probably be very important if the attachment itself had not been founded in part upon the second order directing the appearance of the defendant. For the attachment might have been directed without notice to the defendant, as its object was simply to bring him before the court to answer for the alleged contempt. But before it could be issued the practice required that he should appear to be in contempt. That fact was not established because of the failure to serve the second order personally upon the defendant and to make proof of such service.

The further appeal from the order denying the application for a resettlement of the order already considered will, of course, be disposed of on the appeal taken from the order directing the attachment to be issued.

That order should be reversed with the usual costs and disbursements, and the attachment should be set aside.

Davis and Brady, J. J., concur.  