In re the Accounting of Behe

281 A.D. 205, 119 N.Y.S.2d 142, 1953 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3010

This text of 281 A.D. 205 (In re the Accounting of Behe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Behe, 281 A.D. 205, 119 N.Y.S.2d 142, 1953 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3010 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

Taylor, P. J.

We are called upon to review the orders of the Official Beferee which judicially settled the final account of Stacy D. Behe, former committee of the person and property of Celia M. Kyle, a former incompetent, insofar as said orders dismissed objections filed to said account and insofar as the order of August 1, 1952, fixed and allowed commissions, special allowances and counsel fees out of the former incompetent’s estate.

The facts are relatively simple. The appellant Celia M. Kyle who is now eighty years of age and Clyde Kyle, a man now seventy-three years of age were married on January 15, 1927. The couple lived in the village of Youngstown, New York, from the time of their marriage to January 1, 1930, at which time they moved to what has been termed in the record the 11 homestead farm ’ ’ which Mrs. Kyle inherited from her parents. This farm consisted of 140 acres. In 1929, Mrs. Kyle built a house on the homestead farm at a cost of $23,700.

In addition to the 140-acre homestead farm, there was also a small piece of land consisting of 71 acres which Celia Kyle had title to prior to her marriage. She caused this parcel of land to be transferred so that the ownership to it was vested in the Kyles as tenants by the entirety.

Adjoining the homestead farm, the Kyles, as tenants by the entirety, purchased a parcel of land consisting of 45 acres which was worked in conjunction with the homestead farm. Following this purchase we find Mrs. Kyle owning outright 140 acres of land and a joint interest with her husband of 116 acres of land.

Throughout the period prior to appellant’s commitment the husband seemed to treat all property owned by the wife as community property, which we feel explains in part the basis for the various claims asserted by him to his wife’s property. Typical of that attitude is his answer to the Beferee’s question [208]*208as to who built the house. His reply was: ‘ ‘ It was her money of course. We called everything ours, that is all there was to it. We always worked together.” (Emphasis supplied.) When asked what buildings were on the farm, he replied: Well, there is a house that cost us $23,700 ”. (Emphasis supplied.) Similar expressions are to be found throughout the record. The Kyles continued to live together on the homestead farm until she was committed to Brigham Hall in the month of November, 1948. During that period the parties lived together happily, Mr. Kyle managed the farms and brought them to a state of high productivity and a corresponding increase in income. The wife was appreciative. She placed some of her property in their joint names and also made transfers of real estate and money to her husband. In March, 1949, following her commitment to Brigham Hall, she returned to Niagara Falls and lived for a short time with some relative and then went to live with a Mr. and Mrs. Nelson at Youngstown and finally moved back to her home on the farm. On May 19, 1949, Stacy D. Behe was appointed committee of Celia M. Kyle and acted in that capacity until May 17, 1951, when appellant was declared competent. The committee was thereupon discharged by the Niagara County Court and directed to file his final account. Objections were filed to the account and the issues raised by the account and objections thereto were, by stipulation of the parties, referred to Hon. Samuel J. Harris, Official Referee, to hear and determine. The Referee found that the committee in the conduct of the affairs of the incompetent did not fall short of those high standards required of a committee of an incompetent. We reach a different conclusion, it being our feeling that the committee was derelict in the respects hereinafter pointed out.

By order dated May 16, 1952, the final account of the committee was settled and allowed as filed except for a stipulated surcharge of $183.45. In addition the order provided that petitioner be permitted to make application for commissions and other expenses incurred including legal expenses. Upon a further hearing a statutory allowance of $552.24 was granted to the committee together with an additional allowance of $200, also an allowance of $250 for services as committee of the person of said Celia M. Kyle. Legal fees in the sum of $650 were allowed to counsel for the committee for services rendered in connection with the accounting proceeding.

One of the objections filed to the account concerns certain money found in a deposit box by the committee Behe in a bank [209]*209at Lockport, New York. There is no dispute about the fact that $8,080 was found in said box and further that the said box was in the individual name of Celia M. Kyle. The committee, in the first instance, deposited money in his account as committee. However, he only charges himself with $4,080 instead of the $8,080. The committee makes this explanation: Prior to Kyle’s marriage to the incompetent, she held a mortgage on certain property on Saxon Street in the city of Lockport, New York. The mortgagors defaulted, and in lieu of foreclosure the owner mortgagors at Mrs. Kyle’s request deeded the premises to Clyde Kyle. Subsequently and in the year 1934, the premises were sold and the proceeds therefrom amounting to $2,800 were placed in the safe deposit box standing in the name of the incompetent. There is also testimony upon which Kyle claims he added $1,200 to the $2,800 which was money given him by the incompetent from the farm income. These sums totaling $4,000 were claimed by Kyle and shortly after the appointment of the committee, the committee turned over to Kyle that sum of money. He did not, however, disclose such payment in his annual accounts nor did he disclose having received $8,080 cash from the safe deposit box until filing of his final account. In the face of such disclosure he charges himself with the receipt of only $4,080 from the safe deposit box. The committee never filed an inventory of the box as required by section 1377-a of the Civil Practice Act. His excuse is that the inventory was either mislaid or lost.

How the funds found their way into the deposit box and to whom they belonged is unimportant in this proceeding for accounting. The committee is charged with the duty to inventory the assets of his ward and to conserve them during his appointment. The fact that the box was in the incompetent’s name and no other is all that was necessary for the committee to know. The contents will be presumed to belong to the owner of the box. In this proceeding, we are not interested in title to the contents of the box. What we are interested in, was the committee derelict in disposing of a substantial part of the contents of the incompetent’s box without approval of the court and notice to the incompetent? The committee should charge himself with $8,080, the amount of cash found in the box. In the absence of such showing, his account should be surcharged for the difference.

The law is well settled that the jurisdiction of property of an incompetent vests in the court and not in the committee, the [210]*210committee being merely an agent or custodian for the court to take physical charge of the estate and property. The incompetent is not divested of any property rights or legal title to his estate by the appointment of his committee. Nothing is taken from him except control and management of his estate. (Kent v. West, 33 App. Div. 112, appeal dismissed 163 N. Y. 589; Forbell v. Denton, 53 App. Div. 402; Carter v. Beckwith, 128 N. Y. 312, 316; Matter of Warren, 207 App. Div. 793; Matter of Ireland, 231 App. Div. 288, 291.)

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281 A.D. 205, 119 N.Y.S.2d 142, 1953 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-behe-nyappdiv-1953.