In re the Accounting of Chollar

200 Misc. 948, 107 N.Y.S.2d 192, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2310
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 200 Misc. 948 (In re the Accounting of Chollar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court 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 Chollar, 200 Misc. 948, 107 N.Y.S.2d 192, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2310 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Page, S.

Deceased died a resident of Broome County on the 22d day of June, 1949, leaving a last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate on the 10th day of January, 1950. Thereupon, her brother, Harvey W. Chollar, of Stillwater, N. Y., and Earle W. Stone, former president of Binghamton Savings Bank, were appointed executors of her estate.

The first account herein was filed and the present proceeding instituted on the 3d day of November, 1950. Thereafter, and on the 28th day of May, 1951, a supplemental account was filed by said Earle W. Stone, as one of the said executors. This supplemental account consists of a proposed amendment of Schedule “ Gr ” of the original account by alleging, as additional assets of the estate of said deceased, proceeds of a savings bank account in the amount of $2,468.64 in the Binghamton Savings Bank and proceeds of another savings account in the amount of $888.32 in the City National Bank of Binghamton, N. Y., both of which, during the decedent’s lifetime, had been withdrawn by said Harvey W. Chollar and deposited, in the names of himself and his wife, in the Troy Savings Bank of Troy, N. Y.

Objection to said supplemental or amended account was filed by said Harvey W. Chollar upon the ground that the amounts constituting the proceeds of said savings bank accounts, “ constituted valid gifts made by deceased during her lifetime to Harvey W. Chollar, individually.”

Deceased was a retired school teacher. At the date of the alleged gifts, she was upwards of seventy-five years of age and a member of the Home for Aged Women located at No. 80 Pair-view Avenue, Binghamton, New York. The objectant, a retired Baptist minister, and his wife frequently visited her there. As testified herein by Mary Tabor Chollar, wife of the objectant, on one of these occasions, on the 28th of June, 1948, Sarah V. Chollar told the objectant herein that she wanted to give him her [951]*951savings bank accounts. As a part of some discussion between them as to this proposition, the objectant suggested to his sister Sarah that she might better not turn over her savings accounts to him. He told her that if, despite his advice, she insisted on doing so he would accept the proceeds of the accounts but would hold them intact in case she might, during her remaining lifetime, have need of financial assistance which he would provide for her therefrom. After sending for her bank books and intelligently resolving all the requirements necessary to consummate the transfers, the savings bank accounts were withdrawn as aforesaid.

Most frequently in discovery proceedings, and, also, as in the present case, upon judicial settlements, issues as to the existence or nonexistence of alleged gifts are presented for determination.

By analysis it is found that the complement of elements requisite as the basis for the determination of a gift are seven in number, viz.: (1) the subject matter of the alleged gift must be negotiable property in the sense that it is capable of legal transfer; (2) the donor must have been, at the time the gift was made, of sufficient mental competency to understand the nature and quality of his act in maldng the gift; (3) the donor must have, at such time, intended to make an absolute and complete present transfer to the donee of the subject matter of the gift; (4) delivery to the donee must have been legally perfected during the donor’s lifetime; (5) there must have been an acceptance of the gift by the donee; (6) at the time of the gift, the donor must have been solvent, and (7) title to the subject matter of the gift must have been in the donor. (See 2 Bradford Butler on New York Surrogate Law and Practice, § 1466.)

It is scarcely possible to imagine a case .wherein more than two or three at the most of these elements could be seriously at issue. Ordinarily, the majority of them are readily inferred from circumstances indicative of some semblance of a gift that might or could amount to a tentative basis for claiming it.

In the present case, only two of the seven elements are questioned. The most unusual and interesting one of these is as to acceptance by the alleged donee. The other is as to the mental competency of the alleged donor at the date in question.

We will endeavor to dispose of the latter before taking up the former. In support of the contention that these bank accounts constitute assets of the estate, testimony by the attend[952]*952ing physician at the Home as to the alleged donor’s mentality was adduced. This testimony was generally to the effect that she was suffering from some degree of senile dementia, evidenced by her tendency to quickly forget recent events, and also by her striking at or otherwise resisting nurses at the Home in their ministrations designed for her physical welfare. The fact that, sometime after the date of the alleged gift, she was admitted to the Binghamton State Hospital was also shown by the evidence.

As is supported by other medical testimony, some degree of “ senile dementia ”, even though it may. be only slight, is a fairly frequent condition among persons in their seventies. But, even in instances where the degree is fairly severe, the mentally afflicted person may have intermittent periods, sometimes referred to as “ lucid intervals ”, when he is sufficiently free from the condition so that he would be of a mentality capable of dealing with ordinary transactions.

By all of the testimony in the present case bearing upon this question, the decedent, as evidenced by her conduct of the transaction in question, was definitely clear-minded at the precise time in question. This is shown by her having given specific instructions as to locating the bank books and sending for withdrawal orders, executing the same and her having otherwise quite efficiently directed the entire matter. The fact that she “ struck at ” one of the nurses at the Home a day or two before the transaction in question is of little or no significance in its bearing upon the present issue. This is so because she was a member of the Christian Science faith and it was shown that she had resorted to a somewhat violent attitude toward nurses only at times when they were endeavoring to administer medicines to her which was contrary to her religious belief in that regard. Although this reaction on her part might not have been characteristic of all members of her religious faith, still we cannot say that, under these circumstances, it was unnatural or abnormal to a degree showing mental incompetency. As to her having been some weeks later admitted as a pátient in the Binghamton State Hospital, based on this fact there can be no inference of mental incompetency on the date in question. Her having become a patient at the Binghamton State Hospital, whatever inference this event might support as to her subsequent mental state, has no bearing or effect upon her mental condition at the time of the transfers. Presumptions do not run backwards ”. (See dissenting opinion in Smal[953]*953done v. De Vivo, 278 App. Div. 616, citing MacRae v. Chelsea Fibre Mills, 145 App. Div. 588.)

The other contention sought to be maintained on behalf of deceased’s estate is that the objectant has failed to sustain his burden of proof in relation to the element of acceptance of the gift of the two bank accounts’ proceeds because any otherwise possible inference of acceptance is negatived by the alleged donee’s own words and actions.

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200 Misc. 948, 107 N.Y.S.2d 192, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-chollar-nysurct-1951.