In re Karen H.M.

45 Misc. 3d 858, 991 N.Y.S.2d 868
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Misc. 3d 858 (In re Karen H.M.) 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 Karen H.M., 45 Misc. 3d 858, 991 N.Y.S.2d 868 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sharon A.M. Aarons, J.

A petition and cross petition have been filed for the appointment of a guardian of the person and property of Miriam H.,1 an alleged incapacitated person (AIP). This court is satisfied that the AIP was served with the order to show cause and petition by personal delivery at least 14 days prior to the return date, and that all other necessary interested persons required to be served under Mental Hygiene Law § 81.07 were timely served with the order to show cause and petition.

Kimberly Tate-Brown, Esq. was appointed to serve as Court Evaluator. The hearing was held on March 7, March 31, and April 28, 2014. At the hearing the petitioner was represented by D. Andrew Marshall, Esq., 225 Broadway, New York, NY. The cross petitioner was represented by Michele Cassidy, Esq. and Alexander Eisemann, Esq.,2 of counsel to the Cassidy Law Firm, 2900 Westchester Avenue, Purchase, New York.

The court heard the testimony of the petitioner, Karen H.M.; the cross petitioner, Robynne H.; Clinvern Delroy Murray, Esq., an attorney who effectuated the transfer of certain real prop[860]*860erty of the AIP; Leroy H., the stepson of the AIP; James B., the AIP’s brother; and Kimberly Tate-Brown, Esq., the Court Evaluator.

Hearing Testimony

Testimony of the Petitioner

The AIP, who is 85 years of age, resides at a three-family home owned by the petitioner located at 1115 N—, Bronx, New York.

The petitioner Karen H.M. testified that she is the AIP’s daughter. She is a trained paramedic and Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), and presently teaches an EMT paramedic program at —. Prior to becoming an EMT, she was a New York City police officer, retiring with a full pension. The petitioner resides at 1115 N—, a residential dwelling which she owns, which is divided into three separate apartments. Five other family members, including the AH] reside at the premises. The AIP resides on her own in a second-story apartment, for which she pays, or has paid, monthly rent. One of the petitioner’s two daughters lives in another second-story apartment. The petitioner’s other daughter, the petitioner, and the petitioner’s grandson live in the remaining apartment.

The house was originally owned by the petitioner’s grandfather, and has served as the family home in which the AH] and later the AIP’s children, resided. The house eventually passed by will from the petitioner’s grandfather to the AH] the cross petitioner and their brother. The petitioner voluntarily relinquished her interest because she had credit problems, and her name on the deed could result in denial of a mortgage. The AIP surrendered her interest in the premises at 1115 N—, to her daughter, the cross petitioner, in 2005. In 2008, the petitioner purchased the house from the cross petitioner for $431,000, which was approximately $150,000 less than the fair market value of the home, according to an appraisal which the petitioner obtained at that time. The cross petitioner used the funds to satisfy a $381,000 mortgage which the cross petitioner had taken out on the premises. The home, prior to the cross petitioner’s refinancing, was encumbered only by a very small mortgage.

The petitioner stated that she was present when the AIP was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease by a physician in December 2003. Since 2004, the AIP has been unable to shower herself, and thus the petitioner has been assisting her in that regard since that time.

[861]*861The petitioner has been caring for her mother since the onset of her Alzheimer’s disease. Until May 2013, the cross petitioner cared for the AIP on weekends, but discontinued doing so because of the AIP’s difficulty in ambulating. At the present time, the petitioner provides all of the AIP’s personal needs, while the cross petitioner attends to all of the AIP’s financial matters. The petitioner wakes the AIP in the mornings, assists her to sit on the toilet, bathes her, and feeds her. The AIP is unable to feed herself, or take medication on her own. The AIP is asthmatic, and mostly remains in the home during the winter months. The petitioner administers medication to her mother, which she believes to be Namenda, Aricept, Amlodipine, Advil, Prednisone, Omega and a vitamin—she was uncertain of the exact identity of the pills, because they are purchased by her sister, the cross petitioner, who removes them from the bottles and provides them to the petitioner in pill boxes. The AIP has taken Namenda and Aricept since the onset of her Alzheimer’s disease. On occasion, the cross petitioner has failed to timely provide medications for the AIP

In 2013, the petitioner discovered banking statements in the house which indicated that the AIP has approximately $29,000 in a Chase account. The petitioner did not preserve these records. She testified that the cross petitioner failed to provide a coherent account of the disposition of these funds. Her mother, the AII^ although able to respond verbally, is unable to articulate in any coherent fashion, and is thus unable to communicate the disposition of these funds.

The petitioner receives Social Security payments, a pension from the New York City Housing Authority, and Medicare reimbursement of medical expenses. She also has an IRA account. The cross petitioner pays the petitioner $875 monthly for rent,3 and $200 monthly for food.

The petitioner stated that she desired to become the guardian of the person and property of the AIR She has become frustrated with the present, informal arrangement with the cross petitioner, pursuant to which she is required to ask the cross petitioner for necessaries for the AIP She has never filed for bankruptcy, or been convicted of a crime.

The petitioner rested after giving her testimony, and called no other witnesses.

[862]*862Testimony of the Cross Petitioner

The cross petitioner Robynne H., who is a registered nurse, testified that she is the AIP’s daughter. The AIP’s children are herself, the petitioner, and two brothers, Leroy H. and Rahmel H. Her mother had first been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in July 2003.4 She testified that in 2004, her mother fell, and required hospitalization, after which she was in a nursing home from August to the end of September. It was at this time, while she was in the nursing home, that the AIP executed a power of attorney5 in favor of the cross petitioner, so that bills could be paid and other financial matters attended to. At that time the AIP was still mentally competent, despite her diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, and was able to express her desire that the cross petitioner act as her attorney-in-fact. The power of attorney was entered into evidence after the petitioner withdrew her objection to admissibility based on an alleged defect in the jurat.6

She testified that the AIP stays in bed for long periods of time, laying in the same position. She is unable to visit the AIR as the petitioner has not given her a key to the premises; often she had gone to see her mother and was not able to enter the locked apartment, as no one answered the door.7 The AIP barely [863]*863utilizes her own apartment, and she opined that there was inadequate supervision in the home for the AIP’s safety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Misc. 3d 858, 991 N.Y.S.2d 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-karen-hm-nysupct-2014.