In re the Estate of Gray

7 Misc. 2d 112, 165 N.Y.S.2d 602, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2646
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1957
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Misc. 2d 112 (In re the Estate of Gray) 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 Gray, 7 Misc. 2d 112, 165 N.Y.S.2d 602, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2646 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Roy M. Page, S.

The above-named decedent, while a patient at Broome County Hospital, died intestate on October 31, 1956. On December 18, 1956 his Avidow, Donna Mae Gray, Avas appointed administratrix of his estate. The only distributees of his estate are his said Avidow and a daughter, Thelma Gray.

During his lifetime, the deceased and his second wife, after their marriage in 1952, had cohabited only about three months Avhen she, either for good cause or otherwise, had discontinued her cohabitation Avith him.

Shortly after this, the deceased sold his home, Avhich was a house and lot known and designated as No. 15 Amsbry Street, Binghamton, Noav York, and took up his residence as a boarder and roomer Avith the respondent herein at her house in the toAvn of Conklin, Broome County, New York, where she conducted a boarding and rooming home for elderly persons.

In the latter portion of deceased’s residence with respondent, during the year 1956, he received payment of the balance of the purchase price for his Amsbry Street property in the sum of $5,440.83 in the form of a check from the attorneys in charge of the transfer and, also, had his furniture and furnishings, Avhich had been in storage, moved up to the boarding home of the respondent. There was also a 1947 Oldsmobile of small value, Avhich is in the same category as the furniture and furnishings.

The said check Avas indorsed by Mr. Gray and deposited by the respondent in a savings account at Binghamton Savings Bank, first in the name of herself alone and, later, in a joint account between herself and her daughter. The furniture and furnishings have, since the death of the deceased, remained in the possession of the respondent. She claims both the proceeds of the check and said furniture and furnishings, as well as the automobile, were given to her by the deceased.

The objective of the present proceeding is to determine whether or not the proceeds of this check and the other personal property here in question Avere gifts, so that the respondent would be permitted to retain them as her own or if they should be recovered by the petitioner-administratrix as assets of the estate of the deceased.

The burden of proof to establish any gift is upon him who asserts it. To support this burden of proof, all the legal elements of a gift must have been substantiated. Most prominent [114]*114among the requirements of a gift are intention on the part of the donor to make a gift and the requirement of delivery, which always comprehends the surrender of all dominion over the subject matter of an alleged gift.

The most seriously questionable element involved in the present case is as to Mr. Gray’s having had the necessary intent to make a gift either of the check or the other personal property. In the present case, this issue is complicated by the question as to whether or not he possessed the necessary degree of mental capacity. The preponderance of evidence is to the effect that, during all the portion of 1956 that he lived, he was badly afflicted with arteriosclerosis and a cardiac condition which tended greatly to accentuate the form of mental disability which is generally characterized as “senility”. At any rate, being in a debilitated physical condition, he was very much dependent upon the respondent, so that, if any undue influence had been exercised by her upon him, he was not in a very good position to resist it.

The only witnesses whose testimony can be regarded as having any important bearing on the above-stated issues are the respondent herself, together with testimony provided by a woman named Mrs. Emma Hathaway, who was, during the last few months that the deceased had resided with the respondent, also one of her boarders and roomers, and Dr. Edward Blumenkranz, a psychiatrist, and, also, a general practitioner, who attended the deceased during the last few months of his life.

Support for the theory of a gift as to any of the property in question, particularly in relation to the alleged donor’s unconstrained intention to make a gift of any thereof, is practically all confined to the testimony of the respondent herself. Preliminary to the hearing of this proceeding upon the merits, counsel for the petitioner had conducted a rather extensive inquisitorial examination of the respondent. In the course of this examination, the respondent had asserted her claim that the personal property here in question was all hers by reason of gifts to herself which had been made to her by Mr. Gray. Thereafter, in the hearing upon the merits herein, counsel for the respondent strenuously insisted that, consistently with the provision'of section 347 of the Civil Practice Act to the effect that this provision limits the application of this section to the trial of an action or the hearing upon the merits of a special proceeding, because the respondent had testified in the pretrial examination as to alleged gifts, thus having “ opened the door ”, he had a right to fully adduce testimony of his client as to her personal transactions with the deceased in relation to his having made the alleged gifts to her. Counsel’s statement of Ms contention [115]*115in this connection, as stated in his brief, is: “ Respondent's assertion of title by gift at the very outset of the examination by petitioner raised and joined the issue of title at that point and terminated the inquisitorial stage of the discovery proceeding and petitioner’s continued examination of the respondent thereafter constituted a waiver of Section 347 of the Civil Practice Act and opened the door to testimony by the respondent.”

In support of this contention, he cited authorities as follows: Matter of Schulman (189 Misc. 672); Matter of Garland (97 N. Y. S. 2d 442); Matter of Berardini (238 App. Div. 433, affd. 263 N. Y. 627); Matter of Comfort (234 App. Div. 19); Matter of Rosen (173 Misc. 433), and Matter of Benioff (73 Misc. 493).

Counsel for the administratrix-petitioner, under section 347 of the Civil Practice Act objected to the competency of the witness on the ground that the inquisitorial phase of this proceeding was not a hearing upon the merits, and, therefore, section 347 permitted him, preliminarily, to examine the respondent as to her personal transactions with the deceased. However, a considerable amount of her testimony was taken, but subject to a motion to strike it out. In support of his motion, counsel for the administratrix-petitioner also cited a group of authorities as follows: Matter of Schulman (189 Misc. 672, supra); Matter of Erickson (135 N. Y. S. 2d 56); Matter of Walker (177 Misc. 991), and Matter of Cohen (177 Misc. 304, affd. 263 App. Div. 938).

The granting or denial of the motion to strike out the respondent’s testimony brings squarely into focus herein the validity and present applicability of the above-quoted contention as stated by counsel for the respondent.

No case in either one of the last-above-cited groups of cases appears to be squarely in point on the resolution of the precise question which has been raised herein by counsel for the respondent. This question is, does the mere making of the claim of a gift voiced by a respondent in what was designed to be the inquisitorial phase of a discovery proceeding and in advance of the respondent’s having filed any answer, ipso facto,

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Bluebook (online)
7 Misc. 2d 112, 165 N.Y.S.2d 602, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-gray-nysurct-1957.