In re the Application for the Revocation of Letters of Administration Granted to Robitaille

9 Mills Surr. 480, 78 Misc. 108, 138 N.Y.S. 391
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 480 (In re the Application for the Revocation of Letters of Administration Granted to Robitaille) 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 Application for the Revocation of Letters of Administration Granted to Robitaille, 9 Mills Surr. 480, 78 Misc. 108, 138 N.Y.S. 391 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This is a proceeding to revoke letters of administration heretofore granted by a surrogate for this county and issued to Charles Onesime Robitaille upon the goods, chattels and credits of his uncle Onesime Robitaille, deceased.

The point now here is, was the late Onesime Robitaille domiciled in the province of Quebec, dominion of Canada, at the time of his death so as to confer jurisdiction prima facie upon the Canadian courts to administer his estate in the first instance, or was his true domicile in our county of New York at the time of his death so as to make this the principal or proper place of administration ? If his domicile was in Canada, certain proceedings taken in Canada on testamentary papers purporting to be the last will and testament of Onesime Robitaille, would seem to be prima facie regular, and the administration granted here may have to be revoked or made ancillary to the foreign administration.

It sufficiently appeared on the hearing before the surrogate that. Onesime Robitaille, the deceased, was by birth a British subject, having been born of Canadian parents in the province of Quebec, dominion of Canada. Some thirty years or more ago [482]*482Onesime Robitaille came from his native place in the province of Quebec, Lower Canada, to New York city, where he ultimately established himself in business as a “ haberdasher or gentleman’s furnisher,” as stated by the witnesses. Whatever his business was, he seems to have prospered in New York and to have accumulated a considerable property, some of which was, apparently, real estate. While the evidence before me is not, perhaps, very sharply defined or presented, it sufficiently appears that Onesime Robitaille lived in New York almost continuously for many years after coming here from Canada. He was ultimately naturalized, and in 1888 he was invested with full citizenship by the United States of America. In 1900 or shortly prior he sold out his business, but continued to live in various parts of New York city until 1905 or thereabouts. In 1905 proceedings for the appointment of a committee of the person and property of Onesime Robitaille as an incompetent were instituted in the Supreme Court of the state of New York, at sessions duly held for the county of New York, which proceedings resulted in the appointment of his nephew, Elzear Robitaille, of Ancienne Lorette, province of Quebec, as such committee. The committee, shortly after appointment, appears to have departed from New York with Onesime Robitaille to their old home in the province of Quebec, Canada, and there Onesime Robitaille remained with his relatives .continuously until his death in the year 1910.

It is apparent, that the established courts of the neighboring dominion of Canada have since assumed some sort of jurisdiction over the administration of the estate of the late Onesime Robitaille, and that they have taken cognizance of certain paper writings purporting to be of a testamentary nature and expressive of the last will of the said Onesime Robitaille. Precisely what is the effect of such proceedings in the Canadian courts need not now be determined, as their regularity and effi[483]*483cacy are not points now before me at this stage and I will not consider them.

It is also sufficiently apparent in this proceeding that if Onesime Robitaille, in fact and in law, died testate, domiciled in Lower Canada, the administration proceedings in this jurisdiction should be regarded at most as provisional, and that some sort of ancillary process will be found to be more regular than original proceedings to administer, based on a suggestion of intestacy, when in fact there are extant testamentary papers purporting to be regular. But all these questions of regularity and jurisdiction are reserved for the present. They are very complicated questions. I have had to deal with similar questions since I came into this place. Matter of Elizabeth Connell, N. Y. L. J, Aug. 23, 1911; Matter of McElwaine, 77 Misc. 317. The only point now here at this time is this: Was the last domicile of Onesime Robitaille in the province of Quebec or in our county of New York? When that issue is determined, further proceedings in this court, in accordance with the finding of fact, will at least be facilitated.

The domicile of origin of Onesime Robitaille was unquestionably in the province of Quebec, dominion of Canada. The domicile of origin of a person, in these very modem days when human society has become so mobile and easily transported to distant lands, is of great consideration in the solution of legal questions involving a mixed domicile, as in the absence of positive proofs there is a certain presumption of permanence now attaching to a domicile of origin. Dupuy v. Wurtz, 53 N. Y. 556; Lord v. Colvin, 4 Drew, 366; Stevenson v. Masson, L. R. (17 Eq.) 78; Huntly v. Gaskell, L. R. (1906, App. Cas.) 56; Munro v. Munro, 7 Cl. & Fin. 842. This was a controlling element in the ultimate decision rendered by the House of Lords in the course of the case of the succession to the historic Lauderdale peerages. 17 Abb. N. C. 439; L. R. (10 [484]*484App. Cas.) 692. There an American domicile was claimed by the contestant for the ancestor of the present Lord Lauder-dale, an officer stationed in New York prior to the War for Independence. If that had been established the entire course of the contention for the succession to the peerages of Lauder-dale would have changed. But the domicile of origin, which was Scotland, ultimately prevailed, and in consequence the contestant, Sir James Maitland, was defeated, as the Scotch law was more favorable to claimant’s legal contention than was the law of New York before our independence of the British crown.

In this cause now here, Onesime Robitaille shortly before his final removal to his domicile of origin, as it appears, had an apoplectic seizure, which for a time at least deprived him of self-control, if not of his mind. For some while before this affliction Onesime Robitaille had, however, contemplated a reversion to his domicile of origin, and with a view to that end he had actually sold out some of his belongings in New York and had packed up his household stuff and furniture, intending to make a final resettlement in his native place among his own people living in or about Ancienne Lorette, province of Quebec. His declarations were competent on this point. Matter of New-comb, 192 N. Y. 238. The surrogate has little doubt that this fixed and established intention on the part of Onesime Robitaille was frustrated, if at all, only by his illness mentioned. Before the late Mr. Robitaille could himself consummate his intention to domicile himself in Quebec (Lower Canada) he was deprived to some extent of the power so to do by disease and loss of his senses. But his committee thereafter acted in accordance with his expressed intention, and took him to Lower Canada to his domicile of origin, which continued at least his de facto domicile until he died.

How far Onesime Robitaille after his stroke ever regained his capacity to decide for himself concerning his legal domicile [485]*485is in controversy in this cause. I heard on this point the testimony of Madame Cornelia Iovia Robitaille, of Montreal; of Mr. Elzear Robitaille, of Ancienne Lorette; of Mr. Edmund des Aulniers, of Dr. Victor Laurin, of Mr. Octave Roy and of Mr. Charles Robitaille, and I am bound to say that the evidence on this point is very conflicting.

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9 Mills Surr. 480, 78 Misc. 108, 138 N.Y.S. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-for-the-revocation-of-letters-of-administration-nysurct-1912.