In re the Will of Walker

185 Misc. 1046, 53 N.Y.S.2d 106, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2805
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 185 Misc. 1046 (In re the Will of Walker) 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 Will of Walker, 185 Misc. 1046, 53 N.Y.S.2d 106, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2805 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Foley, S.

In a prior decision the Surrogate disposed of certain preliminary questions involving the construction of the will. (Matter of Walker, N. Y. L. J., May 26, 1944, p. 2040, col. 3.) The primary facts were stated in that decision. The testator, as donor, granted in his will certain powers of appointment to his daughter, Gertrude D. Walker. She exercised these powers by her will.

There remain for. determination several independent issues raised by answer and by objections tó the account. The parties have stipulated the facts on certain of these issues. The Surrogate has taken evidence on another issue.

[1049]*1049The first group of these questions involves the status of cer- . tain persons who claim they were employed under the terms of the will and thereby are entitled to legacies.

(1) Dr. John W. Jackson, claims that he was employed by Miss Walker at the time of her death and that he had been so employed by her for ten and a half years. He contends that he is entitled to a legacy in the siim of $55,200. In opposition to his contention it is urged that he was merely retained professionally. His objections are overruled and his claim is dismissed on the merits. The Surrogate holds that the objectant was not in the “ employ ” of the donee and that he’is not entitled to any legacy under the terms of subdivision (b) of paragraph tenth of her will.

In that subdivision the donee gave “ to each person in my employ * * * at the time of my death and who have been in my employ * * * for more than one year immediately preceding my death, one year’s salary at the rate paid at the date of my death * * In addition to the full year’s salary the donee bequeathed to any person who shall have been in her employ for more than five years an additional year’s salary for each full year that they shall have been employed by her.

Miss Walker had been an invalid from childhood. In January, 1931, she contracted pneumonia. Her attorney arranged at that time for Dr. Jackson to attend her for the first time. He treated her during the period of her illness and continued to render medical services thereafter. At this period he was compensated in the usual professional method of charges. For each visit to the donee at her home in New Jersey he was paid $100; for each office visit he charged and was paid $75; and for each hospital visit he received $30. For the three months’ period between April 3 and July 1,1931, he received a total of $3,965.

In the Winter of 1931, after her serious illness, Miss Walker’s, attorney discussed with her the desirability of having regular medical and nursing attendance with the view of preserving her health and preventing avoidable illness. Miss Walker assented to this plan. During the first year, no exact arrangements were made for the doctor’s visits. He continued to visit her at her home in New Jersey and Massachusetts and was paid for his services on the basis of charges for specific treatments.

• • This arrangement continued until sometime in July, 1932. Miss Walker was apparently satisfied with the services rendered to her but felt that she was being overcharged. She directed her attorney to endeavor to make arrangements to have the work [1050]*1050done more reasonably. Accordingly an agreement was made r with the objectant whereby he was to be paid on a monthly retainer basis instead of upon a charge per visit. At first, it was agreed that he would receive $600 a month and his expenses. In the following ten years this retainer was modified in accordance with the fluctuations of Miss Walker’s income. The charges in the last month of the donee’s lifetime were reduced to $400. There was never any agreement that the objectant was to spend any specified amount of time in the treatment of the donee. It was left entirely to his judgment of the condition of her health. The objectant visited her on an average of twice a month. The agreement of retainer involved no contract for a fixed period of service.

This practice continued up to the time of Miss Walker’s death on December 17,1942. The objectant last visited her on or about December 8, 1942. He did not attend her personally during her fatal illness. There was an attempt to establish that the objectant terminated the relationship in early December. It appeared, however, that Dr. Jackson himself was in ill health and unable at that time to make the trips to her country home in Massachusetts where the donee then lived. The evidence fails to show that he permanently withdrew as her physician. It indicates merely his temporary disability to attend the patient, without either a discharge by the patient or a renunciation of attention by the physician.

Dr. Jackson characterizes the relationship between himself and Miss Walker as that of servant and master and contends that he had been in her “ employ ” at the time of her death and for more than ten years prior to that time. His claim is opposed by the trustees and by the beneficiaries who would share the burden of the payment if allowed.

It would serve no useful purpose to discuss the cases called to the Surrogate’s attention in which it has been determined that a professional man did or did not have the status of an employee within the meaning of some particular statute. “ These statutes have been interpreted by the courts, and effect given to them restricted or liberal in view of the supposed policy and general legislative intent indicated by the particular terms employed.” (Gurney v. Atlantic & G. W. R’y Co., 58 N. Y. 358, 370.)

The objectant also stresses the applicability, of Kay v. General Cable Corporation (144 F. 2d 653, 654). In that case the court construed the Selective Service Act (U. S. Code, tit. 50, Appen[1051]*1051dix, § 301 et seq.) “ in the fight of the purpose which Congress intended to accomplish.” The facts there differ widely from those in the pending proceeding and show a close control over the time of service of the physician and an express written recognition in selective service proceedings of his status as an employee.

These decisions have no relevancy to the language of the will or the search for testamentary intent. The sole inquiry here is whether within the intent of the donee as expressed in her will the objectant was in her “ employ ”. “ When such words are used in a will we must endeavor to place ourselves, so far as we can, in the position of the testator and from that viewpoint seek the meaning which was in the mind of the testator when he used these words.” (Wiseman v. Phipps, 288 N. Y. 311, 313.)

The Surrogate holds the words “ in my employ ” were used in their ordinary and general sense to denote a class of persons whose relationship with the donee was the usual one of employer and employee. Such provisions in wills are not at all uncommon. (See 3 Page on Wills, § 1035; 69 C.J., Wills, § 1217.)

It is clear that under the evidence in this proceeding the objectant did not enjoy the status óf an employee and that Miss Walker never regarded him as a person in her employ. When originally retained to attend her, his status was the same as any physician called in to prescribe for a patient. • A physician is not usually regarded as a servant or employee of his patient.

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Bluebook (online)
185 Misc. 1046, 53 N.Y.S.2d 106, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-will-of-walker-nysurct-1944.