In re the General Guardianship of the Property & Estate of Salm

171 Misc. 367, 12 N.Y.S.2d 678, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1943
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 171 Misc. 367 (In re the General Guardianship of the Property & Estate of Salm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme 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 General Guardianship of the Property & Estate of Salm, 171 Misc. 367, 12 N.Y.S.2d 678, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1943 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Collins, J.

Ludwig Constantin Salm, an alien non-resident, pleading penury, applies for allowances out of the abundant estate of his fourteen-and-a-half-year old son, Peter Alfred Constantin Maria Salm, for whose property and estate this court appointed the infant’s mother, Millicent Rogers Balcom, and John Caldwell Myers, Esq., general guardians, on October 7, 1935.

More specifically, the petition seeks (a) payment to the father out of his son’s estate of an annual allowance of $20,000 for the [368]*368support of the father until his alleged financial condition should no longer require such relief; (b) payment to the father out of the estate of his son of an annual allowance of $10,000 to defray the father’s expenses in availing himself of visitorial and custodial rights under a judicial decree and an agreement between the son’s parents, and (c) payment to the father’s attorney out of the infant’s estate of $35,000 for legal services rendered and disbursements of $1,656.24 incurred in the alleged protection of the son’s property rights.

The general guardians resist the appeal for this largess primarily because of the asserted absence of legal warrant therefor.

The infant’s parents were married January 8, 1924, and their son was born September 27, 1924, after the parents had separated. The marriage was dissolved in France April 11, 1927, the decree embodying the provisions of an agreement between the parties, dated February 22, 1927, concerning the division of the son’s custody as well as his education and maintenance.

The agreement awards the son’s custody to the father approximately twenty-five per cent of the time. The father has not, however, availed himself of all his custodial rights, but, he avows, he is now animated by a desire to see him and visit with him as much as it is permissible.” He desires, furthermore, that his seventy-five-year old mother visit her grandchild, as contemplated by the custodial agreement.

The son has attended school abroad but he is attaining the age when, in harmony with the custodial agreement, his education will be continued in the United States.

The father has never remarried. The mother, however, has remarried twice. At no time has the father contributed to his son’s support, except on such occasions when the son visited the father, during which time ”— so the custodial agreement provides — the father is required to “ furnish suitable quarters and maintenance for the child and his nurse or tutor.”

That the son possesses a considerable estate from which a large income issues is indubitable. The petition asserts that the son owns through his general guardians an outright principal estate worth upwards of One Million five hundred thousand ($1,500,000.00) Dollars, consisting of cash and/or marketable securities.” In addition thereto, so alleges the father, his son is the life beneficiary of a trust fund having a principal worth of upwards of $1,750,000. Thus, summarizes the father, his son is in receipt through his guardians and there is being accumulated for him until he arrives ,at his majority, the income upon upwards of $3,250,000, less tax charges thereon, and personal maintenance expenses.

[369]*369None of this capital or income, however, derives from the son’s father. The fortune came to the son under the last will and testament of his maternal grandfather, Col. Henry H. Rogers, who died on July 25, 1935. Thus, the father solicits a bounty from a source towards which he contributed nothing.

It is contended that the counsel fees for which payment is now sought from the son’s estate were incurred by the father in connection with the son’s interest in his grandfather’s estate.

The father is now fifty-three years old and resides in France, having recently removed from Austria where he was born and resided most of his life. He is of noble birth — a count. His social position is in the upper stratum. He has been tennis champion of Austria, and has occupied a high military status. He predicates this demand for a liberal bestowment on necessity, claiming to have sustained severe financial reverses as a result of political upheavals in Austria. These financial reverses, he declares, have deprived him of capital resources as well as of the means of earning an income. Having no property of realizable value, nor of income, he has, he alleges, been borrowing from friends for immediate necessary day-to-day expenses. He affirms that due to age, limited commercial training and present economic conditions in Austria, he is unable to secure remunerative employment. He has no profession. It does not appear that necessity or inclination has prepared him for his present plight; he has not been inspired to pursue regular gainful occupation or engage regularly in business; although he has, it seems, engaged “ in several business enterprises which proved unsuccessful and involved loss of capital.” Upon the advent of the Nazi domination in Austria, firms and persons who were indebted to ” him “ became unable to pay the same and ” his “ income thereupon ceased and principal amounts became worthless.” “ Political considerations made it advisable for ” him to leave the country of his birth. His mother, too, “ who had enjoyed substantial property and income has suffered disastrously as a result of said political upheavals.”

The basis of the plea appears in paragraph 14 of the petition: “ I have been informed by counsel and verily believe that it is the duty of a child possessing great wealth to support or contribute to the support of a parent without funds or income; and I am confident that my son would, wish to observe his obligation if he fully understood my circumstances and were permitted to make independent disposition of his estate. I have also been advised by counsel and verily believe that I am entitled to an allowance for, expenses in maintaining and visiting with Peter during the times of his minority when I am entitled to his custody. It has now [370]*370become necessary, due to circumstances suddenly arising and beyond my control, to petition this Court for such relief.”

Does this plea find sustenance in the law?

It is ancient doctrine that a parent is under a natural obligation to furnish necessaries for his infant children and if he neglects such duty any other person who supplies such necessaries is deemed to have conferred a benefit on the delinquent parent for which the law raises an implied promise to pay on the part of the parent. (Laumeier v. Laumeier, 237 N. Y. 357; De Brauwere v. De Brauwere, 203 id. 460; Michaels v. Flach, 197 App. Div. 478; Haskell v. Haskell, 201 id. 414.)

This application, in effect, essays a reversal of that doctrine. Here the father seeks support from his infant son. Does the law permit one who has furnished necessaries for the support of indigent parents to recover therefor from a more fortunate child? The ' question is not new. It arose in this State as early as 1819 and was answered in Edwards v. Davis (16 Johns. 281) thus: No one who has afforded relief to indigent persons from motives of humanity, or from other consideration, can maintain a suit, as upon an implied contract, against the children of such parents, arising merely from the duty which such child owes to its parents, to support them.”

The Edwards case was cited with approval many years later (1888) in Herendeen v. De Witt

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171 Misc. 367, 12 N.Y.S.2d 678, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-general-guardianship-of-the-property-estate-of-salm-nysupct-1939.