In re Andrews

56 Misc. 6, 106 N.Y.S. 13
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 Misc. 6 (In re Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Andrews, 56 Misc. 6, 106 N.Y.S. 13 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Dayton, J.

In October, 1903, on the petition of Constant A, Andrews, Blanche E. Andrews, bis wife, was duly de[8]*8dared to be of unsound mind and an incompetent, and by an order of this court, filed about October 28, 1903, John Notman, John E. ¡Roosevelt and Constant A. Andrews were appointed committee of her estate upon giving a bond in the sum of $400,000, which was filed and approved, said order directing as follows: “And they are hereby required to provide a suitable place of residence within the State of New York for the said Blanche L. Andrews and to see that she is properly cared for in a manner suited her condition, means and social position.” Mr. Andrews was also appointed committee of the person. The incompetent’s estate amounts to about the sum of. $373,000, principally invested in the Elk-horn Valley Coal Lands Company, from which dividends of between $17,000 and $18,000 per annum are derived, and the investments of the balance of said estate realize about $5,000 per annum, making a total yearly income of about $22,000. In the event of the death of said incompetent the only persons who may be interested in her estate as her sur- ~ vivors are Constant A. Andrews, her husband, or Mrs. Nannie V. ¡Roosevelt, her sister, the wife of Mr. John E. ¡Roosevelt, one of said committee of the estate. For a number of years prior to 1903 Mr. and Mrs. Andrews resided at No. 737 Madison avenue, in this city, the lease of which premises, at a yearly rental of $3,500, expires October next. The committee of the estate rendered an account November, 1904, which was judicially settled March 10, 1905. About November 8, 1906, Mr. Andrews petitioned this court asking that the committee further account; that direction be given as to the management and expenditure of the estate, and that a trust company be appointed committee. On or about November 9, 1906, Messrs. Notman and Roosevelt also petitioned for a judicial settlement of their account; at or about the same time Mrs. Nannie V. Roosevelt petitioned for the removal of Mr. Andrews as one of the committee of the estate and as the committee of the person. About January 6, 1907, Mr. Notman died, thus creating a vacancy in the committee which has not been filled. About January 22, 1907, these three proceedings were referred to Charles Bulkley Hubbell, Esq., by Mr. Justice Davis, and Mr. Cornelius J', [9]*9Sullivan was appointed special guardian of the incompetent therein. About March 6, 1907, Mr. Roosevelt moved for an order to limit" and restrict the control of Mr. Andrews over the person of the incompetent, and to place such control either in the joint charge of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Andrews or of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Andrews and Mrs. Roosevelt, and directing that Mr. Roosevelt and his - representatives should have full and free right of visitation and inspection over said incompetent and her property, and enjoining Mr. Andrews from interfering with such visitation or inspection, and directing that all charges for the care and support of the incompetent be incurred in the name of the committee of her property; that before the committee of the person should incur any liability on behalf of the incompetent he should give reasonable notice and confer with Mr. Roosevelt. Among the papers before me in said proceedings are the affidavits of Dr. Packer, Dr. Chapin and ¡¡Nellie Coghlan, a nurse, each verified about March 13, 1907, stating that the incompetent has suicidal impulses ;Vlso the affidavit of Bridget Wheatley, nurse, verified March 13, 1907, stating that seeing visitors has a bad effect upon the incompetent, who had manifested suicidal tendencies, so that a carpenter was employed to fasten the windows of thc.residonce in Madison avenue; that it was necessary to take her to á sanitarium, and that it was impossible to care for and safeguard her in a private house. Mr. Justice Davis, on April 8, 1907, made an order directing that Mrs. ¡¡Nannie V. Roosevelt be permitted to visit her sister three times each week; that during such visits Mr. Andrews should not be present, and that neither he nor his employees should interrupt nor interfere with such visits. Said order further provided that the present abode of Mrs. Andrews at Dr. Packer’s Sanitarium should not be changed without first giving notice in writing to John E. Rodsevelt, ¡¡Nannie V. Roosevelt and C. J. Sullivan, special guardian, nor without the further order of this court, and that all persons having the care of Mrs. Andrews or control of or access to her should abide by the terms of said order. Upon the brief of the attorney for Mrs. Roosevelt in opposition to any modification of-said order he states; “The incompetent is [10]*10clearly in no condition to be removed to her home or to he taken care of in a private house. The doctors have stated that she has suicidal tendencies, and that such a tendency is likely to recur. If there was any probability that Mrs. Andrews would recover or would be benefited by a change of abode, Mrs. Roosevelt would be the first to suggest that a change he made,” and the special guardian, in his affidavit of March 14, 1907, states: “ I heartily concur in the recommendation made by Dr. Flint that the incompetent should at present be visited but once a week.” On March 24,. 1907, Dr. Austin Flint furnished a certificate as follows: “The mental unsoundness is chronic, has existed, as I am informed and believe, for several years, and she is not likely to recover.” On July 14, 1907, Dr. Flint certified to the special guardian as follows: “In view of my examination I can only say that Mrs. Andrews seems very- well off where she is (The ' Knolls ’), and that her surroundings seem satisfactory. In her present mental condition, howeyer, I think she would he quite as well off in any other place where she would be as comfortably situated and as well cared for as she is at present. I saw Mrs. Andrews alone.” In the petition of Mr. Andrews for a modification of the order of April eighth appears the following: “ That for several months prior to February 28, 1907, the said Blanche L. Andrews became very much worse, and she displayed marked tendencies to suicide, and it became necessary to fasten /the windows of her said residence 737 Madison avenue in order to prevent a possible danger to her.” Mrs. Roosevelt’s affidavit of July 3, 1907, states the following: “That all the doctors — and there are many — who have seen her have said that Blanche L. Andrews is probably incurable, and this being so, common sense would dictate that the least she is disturbed by any changes the better. They simply cannot do her any good, and deponent particularly urges upon the court that it will not disrupt the commitment to The 'Knolls,’ as deponent feels it is necessary for the safety of her sister that she should he in the charge of and care of some other than her husband.” In pursuance of an order made by me there is filed herewith the report of Allan McLane Hamilton, M. D., and Constantine J. MqcGruire, M- P-, which is as follows: “In con[11]*11fonnity with your directions contained in an order dated Hew York, August 29, 1907, hereto annexed, we, the undersigned, went to the sanitarium of Dr. Flavius Packer, known as The Knolls,’ and situated at Two Hundred and Sixty-third street- and Broadway, on two occasions, and there examined Blanche L. Andrews, wife of Constant A. Andrews, for the purpose of determining her mental condition and of answering the questions submitted to us by yourself as follows:

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Related

In re Sariyanis
173 Misc. 881 (New York Supreme Court, 1940)
In re Andrews
112 N.Y.S. 167 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)
People ex rel. Andrews v. Packer
126 A.D. 794 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)
In re Andrews
125 A.D. 457 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
56 Misc. 6, 106 N.Y.S. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-andrews-nysupct-1907.