In re the Estate of Zweig

145 Misc. 839, 261 N.Y.S. 400, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1709
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 145 Misc. 839 (In re the Estate of Zweig) 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 Zweig, 145 Misc. 839, 261 N.Y.S. 400, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1709 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

It is recent and familiar legal history that the Legislature, by chapter 229 of the Laws of 1929, enacted laws which radically altered the rights of a surviving spouse in the estate of a decedent. The ancient legal landmarks of dower and curtesy were abolished, and in them place the survivor was given a right to claim specified portions of the estate of the departed spouse.

As was pointed out in the first report of the Commission to Investigate Defects in the Laws of Estates, the legislation of which this was a part (Legislative Document, 1929, No. 62), the general purpose of the changes in the law was to harmonize into one uniform system the rules of succession to real and personal property (p. 15), to abolish the common-law rights of dower and curtesy (pp. 17-20) and to adopt a statute similar to that enacted by Pennsylvania in 1917 permitting either surviving spouse to take an intestate share against the provisions of the will (p. 32).

The particular interests in the estate of the decedent which the survivor may receive by an exercise of the right of election given by the statute are not presently pertinent. The subject-matter of this discussion is the manner in which the benefits thus given are capable of procurement. On this subject, the Legislature made the following provisions in subdivision 7 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law: 7. An election made under this section shall be in lieu of any right of dower, and must be made within six months from the date of the issuance of letters testamentary or if letters testamentary have not been issued from the date of the issuance of letters of administration with the will annexed, and shall be made by serving written notice of such election upon the representative of the estate personally or in such other manner as the surrogate may direct and by filing and recording a copy of such notice with proof of service in the surrogate’s court where such will was probated.”

Provision is also made for an enlargement of the time “ to make such election ” before its expiration ” by order of the court, upon a showing of reasonable cause.

As the subdivision is worded, it would prima facie appear that the Legislature had made the performance of the following acts a condition precedent to the acquirement by the surviving spouse of any rights other than those given by the will in the estate of the decedent:

[842]*8421. Service of a written notice of election upon the representatives of the estate within six months from the date of the issuance of original letters.

2. Filing and recording such notice with proof of service in the court which probated the will within the same period.

The proper construction of this portion of the enactment has not been made the subject of adjudication in any reported case. • It so chances, however, that in two cases which were submitted almost simultaneously, various questions relating thereto are raised. For reasons of convenience, these cases will be decided together, since the same basic principles govern both.

The facts disclosed in the Lottman application are that decedent died on October 31, 1931, leaving a will dated the twenty-sixth of the previous September. Objections to its probate were filed by the widow, but were subsequently withdrawn, and such will was admitted, and letters testamentary issued to the three executors, on March 17, 1932. This will made no provision whatsoever for the widow. The affidavit of her attorney states that on March twenty-fifth he served on one of the executors a notice of election to take against the will as in intestacy. This is emphatically denied by the latter. An alleged copy of the notice, with merely a typewritten signature of the attorney, is attached to the moving affidavit This was not signed by the widow and was admittedly not filed or recorded in this court. The application prays leave to file this notice for record.

In the Zweig case the death occurred on November 6, 1931, and a will dated March 27, 1930, and a codicil executed on July 9, 1931, were admitted to probate on December 10, 1931. Letters testamentary were issued on the same date. The widow claims to have served a notice of election on one of the executors on January 4, 1932, reading as follows:

“ To Title Guarantee & Trust Company and Max Herzfeld.

I hereby elect, as widow of Julius Zweig, deceased, to receive $2,500 under the Decedents’ Estate Law out of the Estate of Julius Zweig.

January 4dh, 1932. (Signed) ANNIE ZWEIG.”

By the terms of the will the entire estate, which amounts in gross to $100,000, was, with the exception of two legacies totaling $17,000, left to the widow for fife.

The questions presented for determination on the facts for these cases are:

1. Must a notice of election, in order to assure rights under the [843]*843statute, be served and /or filed within six months from the issuance of letters?

2. Must both acts be performed within the six months’ period?

3. Is a surviving spouse for whom no provision is made in the will, required to elect in order to receive any share in the estate?

4. If a default has been made in compliance with the directions of the statute as to the time of performance of the required act or acts, is it within the power of the court to grant relief in that regard upon an application made after the expiration of such time?

5. What effect, if any, is produced upon the requirements specified in the statute to effect an election, by the participation by the surviving spouse in a contest of the will which is subsequently admitted to probate?

6. Is a notice of election signed merely by an attorney at law in typewriting, a sufficient compliance with the terms of the statute?

The statement cannot successfully be refuted that New York had rather lagged "behind some of her sister States in reforming the common law affecting the rights of a surviving spouse in the property of a decedent. At the date of the enactment of the present statute, twenty-four States had abolished dower, Vermont, the earliest, in 1787, and thirty-six had cast curtesy into the limbo of forgotten things. This, however, tells only a part of the story, since investigation of the various State statutes discloses that, beginning at an extremely early date, a majority of jurisdictions began the process of reforming the common-law rights of a surviving spouse and placing them on a more conveniently determinable basis than that existing in England at the time of the Revolution.

Whereas, therefore, the questions of interpretation of the present statute herein raised have never been directly adjudicated in this State, a vast body of law has grown up in the various States of the Union, including New York, which possesses possible pertinence in the solution of the problems propounded in the proceedings at bar.

At common law a widow was entitled to dower, which consisted of a life estate in one-third of all real property of which her husband was seized at any time during coverture. Where the deceased husband gave testamentary benefits to the widow, either expressly, or by necessary implication, in lieu of her common-law dower rights, an inconsistency developed. It was obviously unjust and improper that she should receive both benefits, but, as is pointed out in Carper v. Crowl (149 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
145 Misc. 839, 261 N.Y.S. 400, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-zweig-nysurct-1932.