Heller v. Teams

216 F. 387, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1601
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 27, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 F. 387 (Heller v. Teams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heller v. Teams, 216 F. 387, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1601 (E.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

This action arises from opposing claims to certain property left by one Eleonore F. Bader, who died in Brooklyn, December 27, 1908. Letters of administration were issued to Charles E. Teale, as public administrator of Kings county, upon the 29th day of December, 1908, and a general statement of the personal property left by the decedent has been reported to the court in [389]*389this 'action by the said administrator. Mr. 'L'eale was also appointed receiver of the realty and is in possession thereof.

It appears from the report and from the testimony that the personal estate of the decedent consisted of savings bank accounts established in the name of herself individually or jointly with her first husband; but it will not be necessary to consider at this time, specifically, the source from which, and the date at which, these various items were accumulated or earned.

The time of acquisition and the method of acquirement of the decedent’s interest in the real estate also need not be considered until its course of devolution by statute is settled.

The first questions which must be disposed of have to do with the family history and the rights of the various parties to the suit, with respect generally to the personalty and real estate of which the decedent died possessed and seized.

At the time of her death, Mrs. Bader had been a widow since the death of her second husband, Ernest G. Bader, upon the 5th day of April, 1882. No children of this marriage survived Mrs. Bader’s death, but the said Ernest G. Bader left a last will and testament, duly probated in Kings county upon the 24th of April, 1882, by which all of his property was left to his children by a previous marriage. Mrs. Bader was survived by two children of his deceased son (George D. Bader), viz., Frank E. and Georgette Bader (a minor who is represented by Ralph Underhill as guardian ad litem), Lulu Bader (widow of George D. and later wife of Charles A. Bader), a second son, George B. Bader and his wife, Katherine F. Bader (George B. Bader has since deceased), and a third son, Charles A. Bader. Charles A. Bader has also died since December 27, 1908, and left him surviving, his widow (said Lulu Bader) and a daughter, Eleanor A. (Bader) Monahan, who was born prior to said December 27, 1908. Lulu Bader has appeared in this action as administratrix, etc., of both George D. and Charles A. Bader, and Eleanor A. Monahan has therefore not been made a party to the action.

It is unnecessary to discuss at this time the individual shares or rights of the Bader claimants as against each other. They as a whole represent the claims of the devisees, next of kin, and heirs at law of Ernest G. Bader, deceased, to the extent that his children by the former marriage might be interested, as next of kin, devisees, or heirs at law in the estate left by his second wife. None of the real estate standing in the name of Mrs. Bader at her decease was purchased by Ernest G. Bader, deceased, nor by Mrs. Bader during his lifetime, and whatever real property Mrs. Bader had before her marriage with Ernest G. Bader had been retained by her as her separate estate, having been in her possession at the time of her marriage with Ernest G. Bader in the month of December, 1877.

Mrs. Bader executed papers under the name of Eleonore Bader and Eleonore F. Bader. She is described in the death certificate as Eleon-ore Belleville Bader, and in the administration papers relating to the estate of Ernest G. Bader as Eleonore B. Bader. In certain other instruments executed during Mr. Bader’s lifetime, she was described as Eleonore K. Bader. It appears from the testimony in this case that [390]*390Mrs. Bader’s baptismal name'was Francoise Eleonore Bonneville,'and that she was born on the 10th of October, 1830, at Paris, France. The name Eleonore F. Bader is apparently a transposition of her maiden names, while the word “Belleville,” used by the Bader family, would seem to be a mistake or inadvertent reference to the family name Bonneville, for which the initial "B” in Mrs. Bader’s name must have stood. The “K” shown in some of the papers came from the name Kress. As to this name the Tacts and dates appear to be as follows: Francoise Eleonore Bonneville came to the United States when she was about 25 years of age, and married upon the 10th day of July, 1856, in Brooklyn, a German naturalized citizen of the United States by the name of Theodore Kress, who died upon the 7th of March, 1870, and was buried in a plot purchased by his widow in Brooklyn. Theodore Kress had boarded in Paris with the mother of Francoise Eleonore Bonneville, and came to the United States shortly before her coming to this country. During his lifetime certain real estate was purchased and title taken in their joint names, but with a provision that it was to be held to them and their heirs forever. They also made deposits in at least two savings banks in the joint name of both depositors, and at the time of Mr. Kress’ death he left a will by which he devised all of his property of every nature to his widow, the probate papers showing that it was less than $10,000 in amount. No children were born of the marriage of Theodore Kress and Francoise Eleonore Bonneville.

From 1870 to 1877 Mrs. Kress continued her work as a dressmaker (which occupation she had previously followed); and her estate seems to have increased until and after the period during which she married, and lived as the wife of, Ernest G. Bader.

Theodore Kress was a child by the second wife of a resident and citizen of the German Empire, who had three sons by his first wife, viz., Edward, Ferdinand, and Charles, but all of whom were dead before the death of Eleonore F. Bader, upon December 27, 1908. Theodore Kress’ father had also by his second wife four other children. One of these, a daughter Fannie, died prior to the. death of Mrs. Bader. A second daughter, Frederica, married one Simonet. She died prior to the death of Mrs. Bader, leaving a son, Thomas (living in Paris), a daughter Elisabeth, married to one Fischer (living in Liverpool, England), and a daughter Marie, married to one Heller and living at Stras-burg, Germany). These children were all living at the death of Mrs. Bader, and presumably are still living. Marie Heller is the plaintiff in the present action. A second son, Emile, married and died before the death of Mrs. Bader, leaving a daughter, Marie Kress, who has lived much of the time in the United States, and is the principal witness in this case, with respect to the relationship of the members of the Kress family. She is a citizen of the United States, and lives part of the time in France. Another daughter, Henriette, married pne Yersin, and died before the death of Mrs. Bader, leaving three children, Paul, Marie, and Jeanne, all of whom were living at the time of the death of Mrs. Bader, and presumably are still living.

It further appears from the testimony that Francoise Eleonore Bonneville was the daughter of one Marguerite Bonneville, who died Jan[391]*391uary 25, 1864, in Paris, and to whom a monument was ere'cted by her daughter, Erancoise Eleonore, while she was the widow of 'Theodore Kress. At that time a 'perpetual right tp the lot in the cemetery was paid for and taken in the name of Mrs. Kress. A birth certificate of the daughter Erancoise Eleonore was kept in her possession, but the particulars as to the parents have been torn therefrom. The original birth and baptismal record shows that she was the daughter of Marguerite Bonneville, barterer, but no father is mentioned.

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216 F. 387, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-v-teams-nyed-1914.