Gelinas LLC v. Hayes

2024 NY Slip Op 24273
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Bronx County
DecidedOctober 23, 2024
DocketIndex No. 800450/2021E
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 24273 (Gelinas LLC v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gelinas LLC v. Hayes, 2024 NY Slip Op 24273 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Gelinas LLC v Hayes (2024 NY Slip Op 24273) [*1]
Gelinas LLC v Hayes
2024 NY Slip Op 24273
Decided on October 23, 2024
Supreme Court, Bronx County
Hummel, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on October 23, 2024
Supreme Court, Bronx County


Gelinas LLC, Plaintiff,

against

Jacqueline Hayes, Defendant.




Index No. 800450/2021E

Plaintiffs
DON ABRAHAM Firm Name:Bronster LLP Address:156 West 56th Street Suite 902, New York, NY 10019 Phone:3472464704 Service E-mail:dabraham@bronsterllp.com Other E-mails:donabraham.law@gmail.com
dabraham@bronsterllp.com

Defendant
RALPH GREG BOWEN Firm Name:BOWEN, KENDALL & ASSOCIATES, LLP Address:801 E 222nd St Ste 1, Bronx, NY 10467-5107 Phone:(718) 547-3600 Service E-mail:bowenandkendall@gmail.com Other E-mails:ralphbowen@hotmail.com Veronica G. Hummel, J.

In accordance with CPLR 2219 (a), the decision herein is made upon consideration of all of the papers filed by the parties in NYSCEF in connection with the motion of defendant JACQUELINE HAYES [Mot. Seq. 4], brought by Order to Show Cause, seeking an order [*2]pursuant to RPAPL § 993: 1) staying the partition sale of a property [FN1] in the Bronx located at 1453 Teller Avenue ("the Residential Property"); enjoining plaintiff GELINAS, LLC. ("Gelinas") from selling, transferring or encumbering the Residential Property; 2) vacating plaintiff's partial summary judgment of partition and sale order; 3) determining the value of the Residential Property under the Heirs Act; 4) permitting Hayes as a co-tenant to exercise co-tenant's buyout option as set forth under the Heirs Act; and 5) such other and further relief as to the court may deem just, equitable and proper.

The central issue on the motion is whether this action for partition is governed by the traditional legal principles of partition or is subject to the special protections and procedures of the relatively new Uniform Partition Heirs Property Act ("the Heirs Act"). In order to categorize a partition action as a traditional or an heirs proceeding, the court must review the source of the title ownership of each owner. If a proceeding includes an owner that obtained title through inheritance, the property must be partitioned pursuant to the mandates of the Heirs Act.

Of import, the legal procedures, protections, and rights of the parties vary greatly depending upon whether the action is a traditional partition action or is subject to the Heirs Act. Under the traditional legal principles of partition, as set forth in RPAPL §§901-992, there are rigid procedures for determining the value of the property and whether a property is appropriately subject to partition, among other relief. Importantly, a traditional partition action often results in the property being sold at auction, sometimes at a significantly discounted price.

In contrast, the Heirs Act includes additional procedures and protections that are imposed in partition actions that involve individuals who acquired title through inheritance [FN2] . These procedures are more stringent, grant the parties significant additional rights, and often provide for the sale of the partition property based on fair market value. Accordingly, in an action to partition a property like this one, the procedures and the rights of the parties differ dramatically based on whether or not the property is determined to be an heirs property.

Background/Procedural History

According to an affidavit, defendant Jacqueline Hayes (Hayes) met and became friends with decedent Charlesanna Adams (Adams) approximately sixty years ago in 1963. Over time, the friendship between Adams and Hayes developed into a romantic relationship.[FN3]

In 1969, the women acquired the Residential Property as joint tenants, with each owing a 50% interest in the property.[FN4] The couple lived together in the house for over thirty-five (35) [*3]years until Adams died in June 2005. After Adams passed, Hayes remained in the home and continues to live there today. Hayes is now over 80 years old.

In addition to owning part of the Residential Property, in 1992, Adams purchased a two-family house located on the same block as the Residential Property at 1437 Teller Avenue ("the Rental Property"). The title to this property was solely in Adams' name.

The court notes that, at the time that the women began to co-habituate, and in fact for their entire life together, the women were not entitled under New York State law, as a same sex couple, to marry. In fact, same sex marriage did not become legal in New York State until June 2011, well after Adams died in 2005.

When Adams died on June 23, 2005, she passed without a Will. Hayes alleges in this action that during their life together, Adams never mentioned any family members, no Adams family members ever visited the couple's home or the hospital, and no family members attended Adams' funeral.

After Adams passed in 2005, Hayes continued to live alone in the Residential Property and she still resides there to date. Hayes also allegedly maintained the Rental Property. Thirteen years after Adams' death, in June 2018, Hayes pro se filed a petition with the Bronx County Surrogate's Court wherein Hayes sought appointment as the administrator of Adams' estate

Hayes alleges that about this time she learned for the first time that Adams had two heirs at law, a niece named Valerie Galloway (the Niece) and a nephew named John V. Galloway, Jr. (the Nephew). It is undisputed that, by operation of law, as the sole distributes of Adams, the Niece and the Nephew each inherited 25% of the Residential Property, although it is not clear when the heirs became aware of that fact.

In an affidavit from the Niece, submitted in support of Gelinas' Motion #3, the Niece claims that she telephoned Adams at least ten times during the two years prior to Adams' death (from 2003-2005). The Niece alleges that she spoke to Hayes on several of those occasions. While averring that she called Adams when Adams was ill in 2005, the Niece claims that she was "shocked" to learn, after Hayes commenced a Surrogate's Court proceeding in 2018, that her aunt had died fourteen years earlier in 2005.

The Niece admits that she was notified of her aunt's death "through a company that monitors Surrogate filings", although she does not specify which company or attorneys contacted her. The Niece immediately challenged Hayes' standing in the proceeding and Hayes subsequently withdrew the petition in November 2019.[FN5]

Fifteen years after the death of Adams, on May 15, 2020, plaintiff Gelinas bought the Nephew's 25% share of the Residential Property for $15,000. Gelinas is a limited liability company which is in the business of property development.

Almost immediately, about six months later, Gelinas commenced the instant action for [*4]the partition and sale of the Residential Property and filed a Notice of Pendency [FN6] on January 11, 2021.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 24273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gelinas-llc-v-hayes-nysupctbrnx-2024.