In re the Revocation of Temporary Letters of Administration upon the Estate of Curtis

194 A.D. 334, 185 N.Y.S. 507, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 A.D. 334 (In re the Revocation of Temporary Letters of Administration upon the Estate of Curtis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Revocation of Temporary Letters of Administration upon the Estate of Curtis, 194 A.D. 334, 185 N.Y.S. 507, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Smith, J.:

Harriet A. Curtis died on January 25, 1919, leaving a last will and testament, naming as executors therein a resident of Scranton, Penn., and a resident of Williamsport, Penn. Harriet Louisa Curtis, her daughter, died on January 10, 1919. Harriet A. Curtis left an estate of the value of about $900,000, and Harriet Louisa Curtis left an estate of upwards of $70,000. Harriet Louisa Curtis also left a will appointing as executors the same persons named in the will of Harriet A. Curtis, both residents of the State of Pennsylvania. Upon the petition of Sylvia Curtis White, verified February 8, 1919, Harold E. Lippincott was appointed by the surrogate of New York county temporary administrator of the estate of Harriet A. Curtis. Upon a similar petition of Sylvia Curtis White, dated upon the same day, Harold E. Lippincott was appointed by the same court temporary administrator of the estate of Harriet Louisa Curtis. Sylvia Curtis White was a granddaughter of Harriet A. Curtis, being a daughter of a son of Harriet A. Curtis, now deceased. She was, therefore, also a niece of Harriet Louisa Curtis. She was the sole next of kin residing in New York State and was, therefore, entitled to make a petition for the appointment of a temporary administrator. No citations were issued because there were no other next of kin residing in the State of New York and no will had been filed. The petition for the appointment of the temporary administrator of Harriet A. Curtis alleges the production of a paper purporting to be the will of said Harriet A. Curtis, but alleges that such paper was not the will of Harriet A. Curtis, for the reason that at the time of the execution of said paper the said Harriet A. Curtis was not of sound and disposing mind. Similar allegations were included in the petition for the appointment of the temporary administrator upon the estate of Harriet Louisa Curtis. There are no allegations in either of these petitions presented, one within eleven days after the death of Harriet A. Curtis, and the other within twenty-nine days after the death of [336]*336Harriet Louisa Curtis, which show any necessity for the appointment of a temporary administrator, except the allegation of the invalidity of the wills of these respective parties. Ordinarily the Surrogate’s Court should be slow to appoint a temporary administrator, unless in case of real necessity, as such an appointment usually involves large additional expenses to the estate in the payment of the commissions of such temporary administrators. But this objection is not here urged by these appellants, who rely upon the fact that both of the said parties resided at Middletown in the county of Orange at the time of death, and by reason of that fact the surrogate of the county of New York had not jurisdiction to entertain the applications. The petition, however, asserts such residence in the city and county of New York, which, prima facie, gave to the surrogate the powej’ to make the appointment in case of real necessity existing therefor.

One of the executors, James E. Burr, of Scranton, Penn., who is executor under both of said wills, thereupon made separate application to the surrogate for the revocation of the said letters of administration, and based the applications mainly upon the lack of jurisdiction in the surrogate of the county of New York, by reason of the residence of the said decedents at the time of their death in the county of Orange. The facts as appear from the record are substantially as follows: Sylvester J. Curtis was the husband of Harriet A. Curtis. At his death he left his widow, Harriet A. Curtis, one son, Thomas E. H. Curtis, the father of Sylvia _ Curtis White, and one daughter, Harriet Louisa Curtis. Sylvester Curtis died on the 25th day of September, 1899. Prior to his death he, with his widow and daughter, had been residents of the city of New York. At the time of his death the son was a resident of New Jersey. The will of Sylvester J. Curtis was probated in the county of Orange upon the petition of Thomas E. H. Curtis and Harriet Augusta Curtis. In that petition it was stated that the said deceased was immediately previous to his death an inhabitant of the county of Orange in the State of New York. The daughter, Harriet Louisa Curtis, was an invalid, needing and receiving at all times, up to the time of her death, the immediate care and supervision of her mother, Harriet A. Curtis. She was incompetent to [337]*337manage her own property. The petition of Sylvia Curtis White recites the death of her father, Thomas E. H. Curtis, upon August 30, 1915, and his residence at the time of his death and for a long time prior thereto, in Plainfield, N. J., and further recites that Harriet Louisa Curtis and Harriet A. Curtis, for a long time prior to August 30, 1915, resided with her son, Thomas E. H. Curtis, the petitioner’s father, at his house in Plainfield in the State of New Jersey. It appears that during the lifetime of this son, Harriet A. Curtis and Harriet Louisa Curtis, residing with him at Plainfield, N. J., traveled from place to place with no fixed abode, except the home of her son in Plainfield, N. J. After the death of Thomas E. H. Curtis in 1915, however, Harriet A. Curtis, with her daughter, went to Middletown, Orange county, where a place was rented by Harriet A. Curtis and her sister-in-law. While Harriet A. Curtis was residing with her son in Plainfield, N. J., she collected a considerable amount of furniture, which was stored after the death of Thomas E. H. Curtis, and that furniture was all afterwards removed to this house in Middletown, Orange county, and the photographs in evidence show such furnishment with the property of Harriet A. Curtis, as would indicate a. comfortable, if not luxurious apartment in this house in Middletown, which was the only fixed abode of Harriet A. Curtis or her daughter for about five years prior to their deaths in 1919. During this time they came to New York, but when coming to New York stopped either at a boarding house or mostly at different hotels, most particularly at the Waldorf Hotel, sometimes for several weeks at a time. All of the securities belonging to Harriet A. Curtis and Harriet Louisa Curtis were removed from safe deposit vaults in New York city to safe deposit vaults in the city of Middletown, and the only bank account which either party had was in a bank in the city of Middletown. They made verified returns under the Income Tax Law in which they described themselves as residents of the city of Middle-town, Orange county, N. Y. In her contracts for safe deposit vaults in the city of Middletown she described herself as a resident of the city of Middletown. Neither of the said parties had any permanent residence in the city of New York [338]*338for many years prior to her death, and both regarded the city of Middletown as their home and so stated. A burial plot in the cemetery in the city of Middletown, upon which an elaborate monument was erected, belonged to Harriet A. Curtis, in which both she and her daughter expected to be buried, and in which they were, in fact, buried. All the evidence in the case points irresistibly to the fact of residence in the city of Middletown in January, 1919, except possibly the testimony of Harriet A. Curtis in a proceeding to which I will now refer. In 1900, after the death of Sylvester J. Curtis, Harriet A. Curtis and her son, Thomas E. H. Curtis, executed a deed of trust for the benefit of Harriet Louisa Curtis. The construction of that deed of trust depended in part upon whether in 1900, when that deed was executed, Harriet A. Curtis was a resident of the State of New York, or of the State of New Jersey.

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Bluebook (online)
194 A.D. 334, 185 N.Y.S. 507, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-revocation-of-temporary-letters-of-administration-upon-the-estate-nyappdiv-1920.