In re the Estate of Basile

63 Misc. 2d 845, 313 N.Y.S.2d 513, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1390
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 Misc. 2d 845 (In re the Estate of Basile) 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 Estate of Basile, 63 Misc. 2d 845, 313 N.Y.S.2d 513, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1390 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

Pierson R. Hildreth, S.

This is a motion by proponent to dismiss objections to probate on the ground that objectant does not have a pecuniary interest in the estate. The contention is that objectant would receive more under the will than in intestacy hence is not entitled to file objections to probate.

If such motion is denied, proponent requests alternative relief in the form of a motion for summary judgment dismissing objections First and Second which allege lack of proper execution and lack of testamentary capacity, thereby leaving for trial only the issue of fraud and undue influence.

The objections are filed by the surviving daughter and sole distributee of decedent who was her mother. The proponent is [846]*846a son-in-law of decedent. He is the husband of another daughter who predeceased decedent, and is the residuary beneficiary and executor of the will offered for probate. Objectant charges that the will was procured as a result of his fraud and undue influence.

Decedent died August 27, 1969. The will was made October 26, 1968. It was prepared by an attorney who was present at and supervised its execution. The attesting witnesses and attorney-draftsman have been examined by contestant pursuant to SOPA 1404 after the filing of objections, and their testimony is before the court on these motions.

By her will decedent gave her daughter any balances remaining in any bank accounts after payment of last illness and burial expenses. She also provided that if such sum should be less than $10,000, the difference between the total so determined and $10,000 be paid to her daughter by her son-in-law and residuary legatee, Lawrence L. Voels. She gave her entire residuary estate to her son-in-law. In the residuary clause she stated that during her lifetime she had transferred title to her home and property into his and her name as joint tenants and that he had promised her that her daughter would receive at least $10,000 after her death, being the balances of bank accounts, and should these balances be less than $10,000, then he was to make up the difference, and that the difference was “to be a charge upon said realty.”

The court holds that insofar as the motion for dismissal of the objections is upon the ground that objectant does not have an interest in the estate which entitles her to file objections the motion is denied.

SCPA 1410 specifies who may object to probate viz: “Any person whose interest in property or in the estate of the testator would be adversely affected by the admission of the will to probate may file objections to the probate of the will or of any portion thereof.”

Objectant is decedent’s daughter and sole distributee. If decedent died intestate objectant will inherit the entire estate. EPTL 4-1.1. The estate of a decedent is an entity which comprises all property in the broad sense of the word which a decedent has at death as well as any property transferred before death which for one reason or another can or should be recovered or brought into the estate for testamentary or intestate administration by the fiduciary. The total estate is finally and judicially determined only by an accounting proceeding to which all persons interested are a party.

[847]*847It is obvious that since only bank accounts and a possible sum of money are given to decedent’s daughter that such legacy is something less than a gift of the entire estate. Of the total estate, considered as an entity, she receives only a portion of a specified item of property, namely, balances of bank accounts, and possibly a sum of money which is charged upon real property which decedent conveyed during her lifetime. A monetary legacy to a sole distributee is not the same as receiving the entire estate which would pass to the sole beneficiary all items of property in kind.

What fractional part of the total estate the legacy represents cannot now be ascertained. The legacy does not give the daughter any items of personal or other property of decedent. Until and unless the will is probated and the residuary legatee decides whether to acceptor reject the residuary bequest which appears to obligate him to pay a sum to the daughter, the amount that she may take under the will is uncertain. The affidavits submitted on this motion indicate that there are assets other than bank accounts, and that there is uncertainty as to whether the son-in-law intends to regard the provision of the will which makes the legacy a charge upon the realty an enforceable lien. The realty was conveyed four days before she made the will.

As sole distributee in intestacy the daughter would have a prior and exclusive right to administer the estate if the will is denied probate. (SOFA 1001.)

The criteria to determine whether objectant is one “whose interest in property or in the estate of the testator would be adversely affected ” by probate of a will is generally stated to be whether he has a financial interest to protect or stands to gain by denial of probate. SOPA 1410 was derived from section 147 of the Surrogate’s Oourt Act which used the phrase, “ any person interested ” in stating who may file objections to probate. The revisers’ notes to SOFA 1410 state that “ The interest 1 in the event ’ or interest in any property affected by the probate of a will sufficient to entitle the owner thereof to file objections must be an interest adverse to the will.” The language of section 147 of the Surrogate’s Court Act was changed to that now contained in SOFA 1410 to more accurately state the rule generally recognized by decisions. The phrase, interest adversely affected, is used, however, in the sense of being deprived of property in the broad sense of the word. (Matter of Davis, 182 N. Y. 468 [1905].)

The Court of Appeals in the Davis case held that the right to administer an estate is a sufficient interest to entitle the per[848]*848son having such right to contest probate. Referring to the phrase ‘‘ who is otherwise interested ’ ’ as contained in the Code of Civil Procedure of 1905 the court said (p. 472) that it ‘ ‘ means only a person who has a pecuniary interest to protect, either as an individual or in a répresentative capacity. An interest resting on sentiment or sympathy, or on any basis other than the gain or loss of money or its equivalent, is not sufficient, but any one who would be deprived of property in the broad sense of the word, or who would become entitled to propj erty by the probate of a will, is authorized to appear and be heard upon the subject.”

In Matter of Salkind (11 Misc 2d 826) the court held that the prior right of a surviving husband to admininister was an interest which entitled him to file objections although the interest he would receive under the will or in intestacy was the same. Since objectant here, as sole distributee, would have a prior right to administer she has an interest under the rule of the Davis case and Salhind case which is adversely affected by probate which entitled her to file objections.

Where the intestate interest of a distributee is greater than the interest given him by will, such distributee is considered to be a person having an interest adversely affected and who is therefore entitled to file objections. (Matter of Salkind, 11 Misc 2d 826; Matter of Rose, 185 Misc. 39, affd. without opn. 269 App. Div. 933.)

Surrogate Delehanty indicated in Matter of Rose (185 Misc.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Misc. 2d 845, 313 N.Y.S.2d 513, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-basile-nysurct-1970.