DeMarco v. Seaman

157 Misc. 390, 283 N.Y.S. 697, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1994
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 157 Misc. 390 (DeMarco v. Seaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeMarco v. Seaman, 157 Misc. 390, 283 N.Y.S. 697, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1994 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Cuff, J.

Applications by guardians ad litem have been made to withdraw what is commonly known as infants’ funds.” Perhaps it would be well to remind ourselves of the history of the money on deposit. In each instance an infant was injured. Two actions were instituted. The infant was awarded money to compensate him for his pain, suffering and incapacity resulting from the injury. The parent was reimbursed for the moneys he had expended for cure, was compensated for any loss of the infant’s services he had already sustained, and was given an estimated amount to repay him for such loss in the future. If juries or the court assessed the damages two judgments were entered. If the cases were settled, one amount was allowed for the infant’s action ” and another amount “ for the loss of services action.”

The court has full control of. the money allotted to the infant. It has nothing to do with the parent’s recovery. The infant’s money must be deposited (in New York city) with the chamberlain. There it is held, subject to order of this court, until the infant attains his majority, when it should be delivered to him. On that day, the infant’s twenty-first birthday, this court, in a leg-off case for example, in effect, says: “ You were injured, in an accident solely because of the negligence of another, many years ago. Your leg was amputated. In this civilized world, under such circumstances, the injured person is afforded an opportunity to appear before a jury to be compensated for such injury. That was done in your case. After your attorney was allowed a sum by the court for his services, there remained of the jury’s verdict $......... The law required that this money be deposited with the Chamberlain of the City of New York to be held by him, earning income for you until today. That was done. When judgment was entered you were a child, not capable in law to manage your own funds. You were provided with a guardian — the best guardian that could be found — the Supreme Court of the State. You are a helpless cripple today. Your father is relieved of his obligation to support you. You must strike out for yourself. Your right to enter the race of the survival of the fittest today on even terms with all others of the [393]*393same age is recognized. This state because of its laws and courts, has substituted for your amputated leg a sum of money — the amount reserved for you by the jury’s verdict in your case. That money preserved by the fiscal officer of the City of New York, has been kept intact by your guardian — the Supreme Court. Here it is — every penny of it — with the earned income. The state has discharged its duty to you. All that could be done for you has been done.”

That depicts vividly for emphasis the origin and theoretical disposition of this money now sought to be withdrawn in various amounts for various reasons.

But a practice has developed in our courts which renders those assuring words of the court an empty gesture. Under the pretense of dire need ” infant deposits can be whittled away. Parents seek these moneys to buy necessaries for the infant.” Many are the reasons advanced and the money (it seems to be the custom) is parcelled out in $100 and $150 allotments. No one takes the trouble to ascertain what is actually done with the funds. All that is known is that the petition states that someone expects to spend it for the benefit of the infant. Unused sums are never returned. There is no accounting.

Consider the foregoing supposititious case and imagine the Supreme Court, instead of presenting the twenty-one year old young man with a check to take the place of his amputated leg, handing him a paper showing a list of withdrawals revealing the sad story that all the money is gone. To pursue the fiction, the young man should declare: “ You say that the money for my injury was used to purchase necessaries for me. My father was reimbursed for what he spent to cure me. He even received money representing loss to him of my earning power. Other infants, possessing no (injury funds ’ have been supported by their fathers. Did not the law place the obligation of supporting me during my minority upon my father? Why was I called upon to support myself? You were my guardian. None of this money could have been withdrawn without your order. Did you not realize that I would have to face the world beginning on my twenty-first birthday ■ — ■ today — without aid from my father and make my way alone? How do you expect that I can exist in my crippled condition without capital to take the place of my normal body? Why did you — my protector, given to me by law — permit my funds, awarded by a jury for a specific purpose, to be diverted and dissipated? Who represented me on those withdrawal applications? I was born normal. Through no fault of mine I am a cripple. I was given money to take the place of my leg. Today I have no leg; I have no money.”

[394]*394If infants are the wards of the Supreme Court, why do we not protect their funds in fact instead of merely in theory? Signing orders submitted is not faithfully discharging the trust reposed in the court. Neither lawyers, litigants nor judges seem to have any fixed or definite ideas on this important subject. Surely, no one could subscribe to some of the reasons for withdrawals set forth in the applications submitted to me, while I have been sitting in this part (Special Term, Queens county). Let us examine the situation to the end that some rules may be formulated for the guidance of all.

The parent, applying in good faith and supposedly having the infant’s interest at heart, actually is the fund’s worst enemy. The court ordinarily relies upon a parent. But in this kind of application the frailness of human nature must be recognized. Some people have a mania for spending money today which -they are not to receive until a tomorrow and often tomorrow ” for them never arrives. Money to be paid to their child at some future time is like a magnet drawing some parents toward it. They are not dishonest. They harbor no less interest in their offspring. They intend no wrong although they serenely perpetrate a great and usually an irreparable one. The temptation is irresistible. Because of the looseness of the courts in granting these applications, attorneys are unable to dissuade their clients, for these parents can cite numerous instances where favorable consideration has been accorded. It is time that a definite stand be taken. Approving such applications should not be left to the whim of each judge who sits in Special Term, one overruling the other in the same case. Confidence in such a guardian cannot be expected to long endure.

The most appealing, but irrelevant, reasons are characteristically advanced to obtain the release of infant’s money. The procedural weakness, however, is that in this attack, except in a purely formal sense, the infant is unrepresented. There is no opposition. There is no appeal. When the order is signed the money is gone forever and spent without trace. The Supreme Court has assumed the duty of protecting the funds of infants, who are the State’s most precious possession. No statute imposed such duty. It was natural for the court to assume that control and it did. The right so to act is inherent in the court. (Losey v. Stanley, 147 N. Y. 560, 569.)

The underlying reason assigned for withdrawing funds is the lack of income in the family of the infant. Unemployment occasions want. The family looks for funds. The only money they know of is the infant’s. It seems logical to them to take part of it.

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Bluebook (online)
157 Misc. 390, 283 N.Y.S. 697, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demarco-v-seaman-nysupct-1934.