Griffin v. Sarsfield

2 Dem. Sur. 4
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Dem. Sur. 4 (Griffin v. Sarsfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. Sarsfield, 2 Dem. Sur. 4 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

This is an application made by Catherine Sarsfield, the maternal aunt of the infant Katie Bell Griffin, that letters of guardianship of the infant’s person and property be issued to some suitable and proper person.

The mother of the infant died a resident of this • county in the spring of 1883, and the infant was then living with her. The father, Jackson A. Griffin, is living, and is a resident of the state o£ Michigan.

A citation was duly issued, and upon its return the father appeared and objected to the appointment of any other person than himself to be the guardian of the property or. of the person of the infant, and asked that he be appointed such guardian.

The rule is well settled that the father, in such a case as this, is entitled to the guardianship of his child, provided he be a suitable person; the right is one of nature and should be accorded him, unless good cause is shown to the contrary. Courts are very unwilling to deprive a parent of the care, custody and society of his own flesh and blood, and should do so only for the best of reasons.

[7]*7Upon the other hand, when courts are called upon to act in this class of cases, the guiding star to their decision should be the welfare of the infant whose interests are before the court to be cared for. The disappointment of a parent may be great, and his heart sorely touched by denying him the custody of his child, but if the court be perfectly satisfied that the best interests of the infant may be seriously prejudiced by his charge of the child, and that it is clear that its welfare will be promoted by awarding the custody to one other than the parent, then it becomes the duty of the court to carry out its convictions.

In the year 1870, the father, Jackson A. Griffin, married his wife, the mother of the infant Katie Bell, at Cuba in this county; shortly thereafter he moved to the state of Michigan, which has ever since been his residence. The fruits of that marriage are three children—a boy aged eight years and two girls, one twelve years old, and the other a little child Katie Bell, aged three years. The parents have not lived together since the fall of 1881.

In the summer of 1882, the wife of Jackson A. Griffin commenced an action against him in the courts of Michigan, for a divorce to dissolve the marriage contract; the parties to that action were then residents of and domiciled in that state; the bill of complaint in that action charged the defendant with cruel and inhuman treatment of the wife, that he had cruelly treated the children of the marriage, and other very serious matters which need not be recited here.

Such proceedings were had upon the issues raised in that action, that the court found the material al[8]*8legations of the complaint to be true, and found that the marriage should be dissolved, upon which there was, on September 25th, 1882, a decree and judgment of absolute divorce duly made and entered. The decree, among other things, awarded the custody of the children to the mother until they should respectively attain the age of twelve years or until the further order of the court.

Immediately after this, the mother with her three children came to this county, where they resided with the mother’s sister, Catherine Sarsfield, the petitioner, until the mother’s death in April, 1883.

The mother left a will by which she bequeathed to the infant Katie Bell a specific legacy of one thousand dollars, and also made the child the residuary legatee with the other two children. This petitioner, after the admission of the will to probate, asked that letters of guardianship be issued to her by virtue of a testamentary appointment, and contended that § 2851 of the Code of Civil Procedure gave the mother the right to appoint a testamentary guardian for her minor children, even if the father be living, or, if that point should be held against her, that, by virtue of the decree of divorce granted in Michigan, the mother had the power, freed from the interference of the divorced husband.

I denied her application, holding that § 2851 related to the practice only, and in no way modified the earlier statutes relating to that subject, and that, although after the decree of divorce there was no husband, the party against whom the decree was granted remained the father, and that a mother has no power, [9]*9under the law of this State, to make a testamentary disposition of the custody of her minor children during the lifetime of the father.

It is now urged that the decree made in Michigan, awarding the custody of the children to the mother, and denying it to the father, is conclusive upon this court; that the courts of Michigan have held that the father was an improper person to have the custody of the infant children, and that this court must respect that decision.

It is true that the judgments of all courts having jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and of the parties, must be accepted without question.

This cokrt has no power to investigate the merits of the questions directly at issue in that action, and settled by the judgment. It seems to me that the question of the custody of the children in that action was only incidentally before the court, and that the effect of the judgment is to hold that, as between the father and the mother, the mother was the proper person to have the custody of the children.

The mother is now dead, and I must hold, in the absence of authority to the contrary, that the judgment of Michigan does not conclude this court upon that branch of the case. The judgment may be of slight weight as evidence bearing upon the issue here presented, but is not controlling.

The will of Eliza Griffin was admitted to probate in this county May 14th, 1883. By her will she appointed an executor, residing at Wellsville in this county, who has filed his oath of office and entered upon the performance of his duties.

[10]*10The specific legacy of $1,000, given to Katie Bell by that will, is to come from a mortgage of $3,500, owned by the testatrix at the time of her death, given upon real property situate in Michigan.

On August 9th, 1883, the Probate court of the county of Kalamazoo, Michigan, granted to Jackson A. Griffin letters of administration upon the estate of said Eliza Griffin, which letters recited that Eliza, at the time of her death, was an inhabitant of Allegany county, Hew York, and had an estate in the county of Kalamazoo, to be administered; and the letters also recited that, on said 9th day of August, 1883, the last will and testament of said deceased was duly filed and recorded at Kalamazoo. In point of fact, it cannot be true that the said will of Eliza is on file in the state of Michigan, for it remains upon file in this office, and must so remain, for one year from the time it was admitted to probate here. However, this court is not called upon to decide the effect of that proceeding granting letters of administration.

Mr. Griffin has under his control the mortgage of $3,500, from which the specific legacies of the infant children are to be paid; the executor of .the will, appointed in this State, has demanded , this mortgage of him, and he refused to deliver it to the executor, and has it in the state of Michigan where he resides, claiming to hold it by virtue of his appointment. A conflict may arise between the executor of the will appointed in this State and the administrator appointed in the state of Michigan.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Dem. Sur. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-sarsfield-nysurct-1883.