In re the Guardianship of Crickard

5 Mills Surr. 527, 52 Misc. 63, 102 N.Y.S. 440
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Mills Surr. 527 (In re the Guardianship of Crickard) 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 Guardianship of Crickard, 5 Mills Surr. 527, 52 Misc. 63, 102 N.Y.S. 440 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Brown, S.

This is an application for the revocation of letters of guardianship. Heretofore and on or about the 23d day of April, 1906, one Alice Fitzgerald made an ex parte application to this court for the appointment of a guardian of the person and property of William Oriekard, an infant, then of the age of ten months or thereabouts. Upon presentation of said petition by the attorney for the petitioner therein, the surrogate called attention to the issuing of a citation to call in the other relatives of the infant, and was assured by said attorney that the best interests of the infant would be subserved by the immediate appointment of the said Alice Fitzgerald, the petitioner, who was an aunt of said infant; and, after the attorney for the petitioner had been informed by the surrogate that, if such appointment should be made, it would be subject to a hearing for a revocation in case the other relatives should apply, the court issued letters of guardianship upon the person and property of the said infant to the said Alice Fitzgerald, upon her filing her oath and bond therein.

Subsequently thereto an application was made to this court for the revocation of said letters, the petition being made by Patrick Oriekard, grandfather of said infant, in whose possession said infant was at the time of the original appointment, [529]*529and still is. Upon said application a citation was issued, and several hearings were had, the grandfather and the guardian, Alice Fitzgerald (now by marriage since said -appointment Alice Fitzgerald Tillotson), both appearing by counsel, and Richard E. White, Esq., having been appointed by the court special guardian for said infant, appearing as such special guardian. From the fact that the original appointment was made ex parte the court regards this hearing in the same light as though a citation had been originally issued and the hearing had before any appointment had been made.

It appears that Mary Crickard, the mother of William Criek•ard, the infant, died in the city of Rochester, on March 27, 1906, leaving her surviving her husband, William Crickard, and the infant in question, then past nine months old. The father was taken sick at or about the time of the death of his wife, and during his sickness he delivered the infant to- his father, Patrick Crickard, and his wife, Elizabeth Crickard, the grandparents of said infant, and requested them to care for the ■child, promising to pay them well for so doing; and thereupon they took the child with them into their care and custody. It ■does not appear whether the father thought at that time that he would not survive his sickness. The father died in the city of Rochester on April 20, 190-6. Both parents died of diphtheria.

It appears that the present guardian, although a resident of the county of Monroe at the time of her appointment, and unmarried, has since married, and that her husband was at the time of said marriage engaged in business at Meriden, Connecticut; and she testified, after her appointment, in -a proceeding brought in the Supreme Court to recover the custody of the child, that •she was then expecting to go to Meriden, Connecticut, to live. ■Since that, on the hearing herein, she has testified that her husband’s home is in Lyons, blew York, and that he was contemplating coming back to Rochester or Lyons. This question, from the evidence before the court, resolves itself into this, that [530]*530Alice Fitzgerald Tillotson cannot 'be regarded as a permanent resident of this State. As far as any competent evidence herein is concerned her husband is presumed to be a resident of the State of Connecticut, and her residence followed that of her-husband upon her marriage to him; and, while it may be that he-has not become a resident of the State of Connecticut, her residence is not assuredly fixed in this State.

From the evidence, and the manner and conduct of the guardian upon the witness stand, although apparently a woman of good intentions, she appears to be narrow-minded, quick-tempered, and obstinate; which, with her past surroundings and environments, render her less capable or desirable as a person to take charge of said infant than she appeared to the surrogate upon the original ex parte application for her appointment.

The parents of the infant were both Roman Catholics. The grandparents -are Roman 'Catholics. While Mrs.' Tillotson is a Roman Catholic, she has recently married an Episcopalian, and was married by a clergman outside the pale of the Roman Catholic church. This point has been urged very strenuously by the counsel requesting the revocation of the letters heretofore issued, and, it seems to the court, with good reason. It is refreshing in these days of iconoclasm to find people to whom their religion is of some vital moment, who earnestly believe that their children should be brought up in their religion; and we consider that it is the duty of the courts, as far as it consistently can be done, to see to it that guardians who have charge of the custody of infants should be of the same religion as the deceased parents-, and should be earnest in leading said infants to follow the religion of their deceased parents. Eb exception can be taken by the court to Alice Fitzgerald marrying an Episcopalian. That was her privilege and her right, but the fact that she has done so, that she was married by a clergyman outside of the church of' her childhood, shows a laxity in conforming to the regulations of her church; and an infant brought up by her in the associa[531]*531tion of her husband, no matter how good a man he is (the better and the more earnest he is for his own faith the greater would his influence be in turning a young child to view religion from his point of view) would naturally be influenced thereby. From a religious point of view we think that the contention of the grandfather that the letters should be revoked as to the person is sound, for the general welfare of the infant.

The grandparents appear to he reputable people, living at oí near a country village, upon a small farm; they have brought up a family of children, and they appear competent and capable of properly bringing up their grandchild. There is no evidence in the case that the mother requested that her sister, Alice Fitzgerald, who was godmother of the infant, should take care of the child in case anything happened to her; but there was also evidence of the mother’s making remarks to people which show her doubt as to her said sister being a capable person to care for such child. But the death of the father, subsequent to the mother, and the request of the father that his parents, the grandparents of the infant, should take the child, and the fact that they are, as next of kin, nearer the infant than the aunt, leads me to believe that the grandparents are entitled to the child rather than the aunt. - There is no question in my mind but that the guardian of the person should be removed.

As to whether the guardian of the property should be removed has been a more serious question to decide; but, under the authority of Matter of Feeley, reported in 4 Redfield, 306, and Bolling v. Coughlin, 5> Redfield, 116, and the inherent powers of a Surrogate’s Court over its own decrees, I hold that the court has power, where an appointment is made ex parte and application is afterwards made to revoke, and upon the hearing the evidence produced before the court convinces the court that the order granted ex parte

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In re the Adoption of Maxwell
151 N.E.2d 848 (New York Court of Appeals, 1958)
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160 Misc. 13 (New York Family Court, 1936)
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Bluebook (online)
5 Mills Surr. 527, 52 Misc. 63, 102 N.Y.S. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-crickard-nysurct-1906.