In re the Estate of Kirkby

57 Misc. 2d 982, 293 N.Y.S.2d 1008, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1233
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 30, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 Misc. 2d 982 (In re the Estate of Kirkby) 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 Kirkby, 57 Misc. 2d 982, 293 N.Y.S.2d 1008, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1233 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

S. Samuel Di Falco, S.

Laura Geer Kirkby died, a widow without issue, on November 15, 1963, domiciled in the County of Kent in England. Long prior thereto and while a resident of this State, she had executed a will on November 10, 1914 which has been admitted to probate in this court with letters of administration with the will annexed issuing to the Public Administrator who is here accounting. The dispositive provisions of that instrument were defeated by lapse through the prior deaths of all of the persons named to take as legatees and devisees and as a consequence intestacy results (Hard v. Ashley, 117 N. Y. 606; Matter of Costello, 147 Misc. 629; Matter of Leitiser, 125 N. Y. S. 2d 133).

Issue has been joined in this proceeding by persons asserting a status as distributees of the decedent on the paternal side. They severally filed answers objecting to the allegation in the petition that the testatrix died without known heirs; but it is a controversy between one group of objectants concerning the right of certain others to inherit because of the alleged illegitimacy of the ancestors through whom their relationship to the testatrix is traced which is at the base of the principal issue in dispute.

The claimants are in agreement that the law of England controls the distribution of the estate and they have satisfactorily established the fact that there are no persons related to the decedent on the maternal side who survived to share in the inheritance. The respondents are correct in their assertion regarding the controlling law for the deceased’s conceded domicile in England conclusively determines that question (EPTL 3-5.1, subd. [b], par. [2]; Matter of Gifford, 279 N. Y. 470). That being the case, all of the objectants, if related to the testatri through legitimate ancestors are on stirpital parity under the governing English statutes, as descendants in more or less remote degrees of her uncle and her aunt (Administration of Estates Act [1925], § 46, as amd. by Intestates’ Estates Act [1952], 15 & 16 Geo. VI & 1 Eliz. II, ch. 64; cf. 16 Halsbury’s Laws of England [3d ed.], Executors and Administrators, par. 780).

[985]*985If there is neither issue nor parent(s), relatives take as follows: (1) brothers and sisters of the whole blood and their issue; (2) brothers and sisters of the half blood and their, issue; (3) grandparent(s) in equal shares; (4) uncles and aunts being brothers and sisters of the whole blood of a parent and their issue-, (5) uncles and aunts being brothers and sisters of the half blood of a parent and their issue; (6) the Crown. (Intestates’ Estates Act, 15 & 16 Geo. VI & 1 Eliz. II, ch. 64; italics supplied.)

The testatrix was the only child born of the marriage of Albert Gibbs and Maria Thorne, both long since dead. No descendants on her mother’s side survive and the estate, as earlier noted, is presumably distributable among her paternal collaterals who are the issue of her uncle Luman Gibbs and of her aunt Lydia Gibbs. In the interest of clarity the individuals who comprise these two groups will be described collectively by the names of their respective ancestors. It is the position of the Luman claimants that Lydia’s only children, her two daughters, through whom the other objectants claim relationship to the testatrix, were both illegitimate, thus disqualifying all of her descendants from sharing in the estate. It was the proof brought forward to support the allegation of illegitimacy which formulated the issue for trial for the English authorities do in fact have the effect claimed for them by the Luman group and deny to Lydia’s progeny, if her daughters were illegitimate, the right to participate in any distribution. ‘ ‘ A bastard was incapable of transmitting heritable blood to his legitimate descendants so as to enable them to claim through him ” (3 Halsbury’s Laws of England [3d ed.], Bastardy and Legitimation, p. 104, par. 162, citing Birtwhistle v. Vardill, (7 Cl. & Fin. 895) where the rule is stated at page 937 (7 Eng. Rep. 1308, 1323): some stress appears to have been placed on the argument, that if B. had died before A. the intestate, leaving a child, such child might have inherited to A., tracing through his legitimate parent; and then it was asked if the child might inherit, why might not the parent himself inherit? But the answer to that supposed case appears to be that if the parent be not capable of inheriting himself, he has no heritable blood which he can transmit to his child; so that the child could not, under the assumed facts, have inherited ’ ’.

It may be observed in passing that the rule would be the same were the law of this jurisdiction to be applied in deciding the rights of inheritance (Matter of Thomann, 144 Misc. 497; Matter of Tomacelli-Filomarino, 189 Misc. 410; Matter of Slater, 195 Misc. 713; see, also, 87 ALR 2d 1274, 1281).

[986]*986In determining whether the deceased daughters of Lydia Gibbs were or were not legitimate, it is not the law of the domicile of the testatrix but, instead, the law of this jurisdiction of which they were residents, the so-called “ personal law ” of the persons directly involved, to which the court must resort (3 Halsbury’s Laws of England [3d ed.], Bastardy and Legitimation, pp. 86, 104; In re Bischoffsheim; Cassel v. Grant, [1948], ch. 79; [1947] 2 All E. R. 830; 87 ALR 2d 1274, 1281; Fourth Report of Temp. State Comm. on Modernization, Revision and Simplification of the Law of Estates; N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1965, No. 19, p. 233). It should be noted, however, that the enactment without retroactive effect of chapter 958 of the Laws of 1965 adding section 83-a to the Decedent Estate Law (now EPTL 4-1.2) substantially enlarging the rights of inheritance of illegitimates, has no force upon the facts of this case, for, as has been noted, the right to share, as distinguished from questions concerning the status of the individual claimants, is governed by the law of England.

Lydia Gibbs was born in Boyntonville, New York, in 1823 and died and was buried in that community, after a life-long residence, in 1910. Her first child, Jennie, was born there in 1846 but there is no official documentation of the birth or of a marriage of the mother for it was not until 1847, according to the testimony of the present Town Clerk and an archivist in the Library of the State of New York that the community commenced to maintain such records. Three years after Jennie’s birth Lydia’s second and only other child was born. Her birth certificate gives her surname as Gibbs, her mother’s maiden name, and in the space opposite the word “ father ” appears the entry ‘1 illegitimate ’ ’. Great reliance was placed upon this document by those who assail the claim of Lydia’s progeny and, in addition, they were able to assemble and present other material of an official or quasi-official nature which lends support to the assertion that Lydia never married and that her children were not lawful issue. Throughout her entire life, it was developed, she was known in the community as “ Lydia Gibbs ” and she was so named in the records of the Pittstown Methodist Church in the entries for the years 1880, 1883, 1885 and 1888, produced and identified by the present pastor.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Misc. 2d 982, 293 N.Y.S.2d 1008, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-kirkby-nysurct-1968.