Hama v. RiverSource Life Insurance

39 Misc. 3d 429
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 26, 2012
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Misc. 3d 429 (Hama v. RiverSource Life Insurance) 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
Hama v. RiverSource Life Insurance, 39 Misc. 3d 429 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

[431]*431OPINION OF THE COURT

Kristin Booth Glen, S.

The narrow issue before the court is whether Yuko Machida abandoned her husband, Shoichiro Hama, and therefore has forfeited the rights with respect to his estate that would otherwise accrue to her as his surviving spouse (EPTL 5-1.2 [a] [5]). There is also a larger issue, perhaps better directed to the legislature: whether the strict definition of abandonment in the old fault-based Domestic Relations Law is appropriately imported into the EPTL for purposes of determining intestate succession or the right of spousal election.1 The unusual facts of this case present an opportunity to consider the second issue, while necessarily deciding the first, here, against Machida.

Facts

Machida worked for decedent (familiarly known as Sho) in his design business. They dated, according to Machida, with an understanding that their relationship was not “exclusive.” From late 2004, with Sho’s knowledge, Machida was involved with another man, Travis Klose, with whom she and Sho socialized. Klose moved to Japan in early 2005 and, in May 2005, Machida moved into Sho’s apartment on East 25th Street. In 2006, Sho asked her to marry him, and they were legally married on July 7, 2006.

The reason for the marriage may or may not have been romantic.2 According to the affidavit of Steven Bromberger, CPA, Sho’s accountant,3

“3. Mr. Hama owned a condominium apartment, Unit 26A, located at 43 East 25th Street in Manhattan .... In or around June 2006 I met with Mr. Hama and he told me that he intended to sell his Apartment and asked me what the tax consequences [432]*432would be. I informed Mr. Hama that there would be a capital gains tax of approximately $60,000 on the sale of his Apartment.
“4. Mr. Hama’s income was in decline and he asked me if there was something he could do to mitigate the capital gains tax on the sale of the Apartment. I suggested in jest that if he were married on the date that the Apartment was sold that he would not have to pay any capital gains tax.
“5. I met Mr. Hama a few weeks later and he informed me that he had married Ms. Yuko Machida, who I knew as an employee of his company, Studio Marz, Ltd. . . .
“6. About two months after his marriage to Ms. Machida, Mr. Hama sold his Apartment on September 6, 2006 ....
“7. In or about November 2006, I met with Mr. Hama and he informed me that he wanted to obtain a divorce from Ms. Machida. I advised him that was a bad idea. Mr. Hama argued that ‘many people get divorced shortly after they get married.’ I answered that no client of mine, who just saved all of the tax that he had saved by being married when he sold his primary residence was getting divorced so quickly. Mr. Hama then asked me how long I felt he needed to stay married and I told him approximately two years.”

In 2007 Sho moved to Japan for medical treatment. Machida, who continued to work for his company, also moved to Japan.4 There she continued her relationship with Klose, with Sho’s knowledge. In March 2009, according to Machida:

“I registered as husband and wife with Travis [Klose] .... I was feeling pressure from my parents about my relationship with Travis. Registering with him as married relieved some of that pressure. Sho was fully aware of my plan to register as married to Travis .... He even acted as one of the two witnesses to my ‘marriage3 to Travis, signing our marriage certificate and affixing his personal seal, as is the custom with official documents in Japan” (emphasis added).

[433]*433Despite this “registration” or marriage,5 Sho unquestionably-considered himself still legally married to Machida and entitled to the benefits that flowed from that marriage, as demonstrated by his accountant’s affidavit, which reads:

“In or around August 2009, Mr. Hama again asked me by email about obtaining a divorce from Ms. Machida. We had been discussing his intention to sell his apartment located at 66 Crosby Street. This property had been the location where his company, Studio Marz, had conducted its business and the company had been paying rent to Mr. Hama. I told Mr. Hama that the apartment at 66 Crosby Street needed to be a strictly a [sic] personal residence for two years and not an income producing property before he could sell it and claim capital gains deductions as a personal residence. I advised Mr. Hama by an email dated August 14, 2009, ‘Regarding the apartment, you need to stay married.’ ”

Sho died intestate in Japan on September 4, 2009, leaving an estate of approximately $1.5 million subject to administration in New York, survived by Machida and by his parents, Sumiko and Matashichiro Hama.

Procedural Posture

On December 4, 2009, Machida, a nonresident alien, petitioned for the issuance of letters of administration to herself and her designee, Michael H. Kane (see SCPA 707 [1] [c]). On January 11, 2010, decedent’s parents, also nonresident aliens, cross-petitioned for the issuance of letters of administration to their designee.6

[434]*434In addition to competing administration petitions, there is a related action commenced by Sho’s parents against Machida and RiverSource Life Insurance Company of New York, which was transferred to this court from Supreme Court, New York County, by order dated November 15, 2010. In that action, decedent’s parents seek a declaratory judgment that Machida is not the default beneficiary of certain death benefits, valued at approximately $350,000, under an annuity agreement between decedent and RiverSource.

On March 31, 2011, Matthew Presseau, the designee of decedent’s parents, filed an amended motion for: (1) an order consolidating the administration proceedings with the declaratory judgment action, and (2) summary judgment dismissing the administration petition of Machida and Kane, revoking the temporary letters that had been issued to Kane, granting letters of administration to Presseau, and declaring that Machida is not a spouse for purposes of decedent’s annuity contract with RiverSource.

On April 20, 2011, Machida filed a cross motion for summary judgment dismissing the cross petition and adjudging Machida to be the default beneficiary of decedent’s annuity contract with RiverSource.

The Motion and Cross Motion for Summary Judgment in the Administration Proceeding

On a motion for summary judgment, the court must view the facts “in the light most favorable to the non-moving party” (Vega v Restani Constr. Corp., 18 NY3d 499, 503 [2012]). Here, with respect to Presseau’s motion for summary judgment (as distinct from Machida’s cross motion), Machida is the nonmoving party. Summary judgment may be granted only in the absence of disputed material facts (id.).

The Law of Abandonment

The applicable statute, EPTL 5-1.2, provides as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Misc. 3d 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hama-v-riversource-life-insurance-nysurct-2012.