Hotarek v. Benson
This text of 557 A.2d 1259 (Hotarek v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal from an order of the Probate Court for the district of Old Lyme ascertaining the heirs and ordering the distribution of the intestate estate of Paul Hotarek, a deceased minor. See General Statutes § 45-288 et seq. The order provided that the defendant, Suzanne Benson, the biological mother of Paul Hotarek, was an heir of the deceased and entitled to inherit one half of his estate. The order also provided that the plaintiff, Kenneth Hotarek, the father of the deceased, was an heir and entitled to inherit the other half.
The facts leading to this probate appeal are unique and tragic. The plaintiff, Kenneth Hotarek, and the defendant, Suzanne Benson, were married on July 27, 1968. The deceased, Paul Hotarek, issue of the marriage, was bom on October 25,1970. The Hotarek marriage was dissolved on October 26, 1972, when Paul [123]*123was two years old. On July 10, 1986, at the age of fifteen, Paul was killed in a motor vehicle accident.
Subsequent to Paul’s death, his estate settled a claim against the tortfeasor who was responsible for his demise for $20,000 and was subsequently awarded underinsured motorists benefits in the amount of $525,000. The net proceeds of those two awards were the only substantial assets in the decedent’s estate.1 Immediately following Paul’s death and during the initial stages of the probate proceedings, the defendant could not be located. Consequently, the Probate Court appointed a guardian ad litem to protect her interests. Her guardian ad litem engaged the services of an investigator who finally tracked down the defendant on December 10, 1987, at her residence in Hurricane, Utah.2 It was at that time that the defendant first learned of her son’s death in Connecticut some seventeen months earlier. Her appearance, the Probate Court order distributing one half of Paul’s net estate to her, and the plaintiff’s appeal of that order followed.
Throughout these proceedings the plaintiff has asserted that for approximately thirteen years, from December, 1973, until the date of Paul’s death in 1986, the defendant had no contact with the deceased. He avers that during that time the defendant failed to provide any financial support to, maintain any interest in, or display any love and affection for her son. He acknowledges that the defendant’s parental rights were never officially terminated but maintains that because the defendant had abandoned her minor son during his life she was not entitled to share in his estate after his death.
[124]*124The Probate Court disagreed and ordered the distribution of the decedent’s net estate, one half to the plaintiff and one half to the defendant in accord with General Statutes §§ 45-272, 45-276 (a) (1) and 45-280 (b).3 The plaintiff, thereafter, appealed to the Superior Court. After the pleadings were closed, the Superior Court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment [125]*125based on the plaintiffs admissions that he and the defendant had been married, that the deceased was the issue of their marriage, and that the defendant’s parental rights “were not terminated as termination of parental rights is defined in Section 17-32d (e) of the Connecticut General Statutes.”4 See Practice Book § 378 et seq. In granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment the Superior Court ruled that “there is neither common law nor statutory law upon which relief can be granted [to the plaintiff].” We agree.
General Statutes § 45-276 (a) (1) provides that if a person dies intestate leaving no spouse or children, the residue of the intestate’s estate shall be distributed equally to the decedent’s parent or parents. Neither § 45-276 (a) (1) nor any other statute creates an exception disinheriting a parent who has abandoned a minor child who later dies intestate. The plaintiff concedes that to be the statutory law. He urges, however, that we find that the Probate Court and the Superior Court erred in failing to exercise an unspecified, inherent equitable power to vary the statute to prevent an injustice. That failing, he implores this court to promulgate, by judicial fiat, a rule that will preclude the defendant from inheriting because of her abandonment of her minor child. Unfortunately, we can do neither.
The law governing descent and distribution emanates from the legislature and is purely statutory. Irving Trust Co. v. Day, 314 U.S. 556, 562, 62 S. Ct. 398, 86 L. Ed. 452 (1942); Bird v. Plunkett, 139 Conn. 491, [126]*126501-502, 95 A.2d 71 (1953); In re Holibaugh, 18 N. J. 229, 235,113 A.2d 654(1955); Vinson v. Chappell, 275 N.C. 234, 240,166 S.E.2d 686 (1969); 23 Am. Jur. 2d, Descent and Distribution § 9. The legislature has, by statute, carved out exceptions to the statutes governing descent and distribution to deprive an ostensibly rightful heir, falling within the ambit of those exceptions, of an otherwise lawful inheritance. Under § 45-273a (a)5 a person who, without sufficient cause, [127]*127abandons his or her spouse is foreclosed from receiving a statutory share of the estate of the deceased spouse. Under § 45-279 (a)* ****6 a person finally convicted of murder is precluded from inheriting any part of the [128]*128estate of the deceased victim; see Bird v. Plunkett, supra; see also General Statutes § 45-279 (b), (c) (1) and (2).7 Absent, however, is any statute barring a parent who has abandoned a minor child from inheriting from the estate of the minor child.
Even if the omission of such a statute were the result of legislative oversight or neglect, we have no power to supply the omission or to remedy the effect of the neglect. Matter of Zolessi’s Will, 154 Misc. 313, 315, 277 N.Y.S. 137 (1935). “[A]ny qualification [of the law of descent and distribution] pronounced by this court would be a judicial grafting of public policy restrictions on an explicit statutory provision.” Anstine v. Hawkins, 92 Idaho 561, 562, 447 P.2d 677 (1968); Kreisel v. Ingham, 113 So. 2d 205, 209 (Fla. App. 1959). The authorities make clear that judicial tribunals have no concern with the policy of legislation and they cannot engraft upon the provisions of the statutes of descent and distribution an exception to bar an inheritance. [129]*129Bird v. Plunkett, supra, 500. The statutes cannot be changed by the court to make them conform to the court’s conception of right and justice in a particular case. Estate of Kirby, 162 Cal. 91, 94,121 P. 370 (1912); 23 Am. Jur. 2d, supra, § 12. To avoid trenching on legislative ground, the court must take the view that if the legislature had intended such an exception from the statutes as is sought in this case, it would have said so. See Kerin v. Goldfarb, 160 Conn. 463, 467, 280 A.2d 143 (1971); Lewis v. Shannon, 121 Conn. 594, 598, 186 A.
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557 A.2d 1259, 211 Conn. 121, 1989 Conn. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotarek-v-benson-conn-1989.