Lamont v. Couteau

192 Misc. 736, 77 N.Y.S.2d 113, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2132
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 192 Misc. 736 (Lamont v. Couteau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamont v. Couteau, 192 Misc. 736, 77 N.Y.S.2d 113, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2132 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Sicher, J.

Indigent parents of advanced years are ordinarily cared for within the family group. A poor relative ’ proceeding in this Court is almost always symptomatic of atypical conditions * * (Neuerstein v. Newburger, 53 N. Y. S. 2d 906, 908, 909.) Thus, the instant proceeding stems from deep hostility between the incompetent’s sister, in her capacity as committee of the person, and the incompetent’s legally adopted daughter.

The facts are unusual and involve questions of law.

On May 7,1934, the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Kings County, appointed X Trust Company as committee of the property, and a sister, “ Edith Lamont ”, as committee of the person, of the above-named “ Babette Couteau ” (petitioner herein), a duly adjudicated incompetent. (Civ. Prac. Act, art. 81.)

Previously, on June 6, 1919, upon petition of said “ Babette Couteau ” and her husband, “ Andre Couteau ”, since deceased, the Surrogate’s Court, Kings County, had duly confirmed the [738]*738adoption of the above-named “ Roberta Contean ” (respondent herein) by said “ Andre Contean ” and Babette Contean ” as her foster parents and adjudged that she should thereafter be regarded and treated in all respects as the child of the said ‘ Andre Conteau ’ and ‘ Babette Coutean ’, foster parents, with all the rights and privileges conferred by law.”

That order of adoption was entered pursuant to then sections 113 and 114 of Domestic Relations Law (as amd. by L. 1915, cb. 352 and L. 1916, cb. 453), which provided, inter alia, analogously to present sections 114 and 115 of Domestic Relations Law, that “ Thereafter the parents of the person adopted are relieved from all parental duties toward, and of all responsibility for, and have no rights over such child, or to his property by descent or succession * * *. The foster parent or parents and the person adopted sustain toward each other the legal relation of parent and child, and have all the rights and are subject to all the duties of that relation, including the right of inheritance from each other, except [next follow certain provisions here immaterial].” (Italics supplied.)

On July 25, 1947, X Trust Company filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Kings County, an account of its acts and proceedings as committee of the property of said Babette Coutean ” for the period from the date of its appointment to May 15, 1947, inclusive; and on September 29, 1947, decision was rendered that the account be approved as filed, that said “ Roberta Coutean’s ” claim to certain jewelry referred to in the account be allowed; that the balance remaining in the estate, after payment of commissions and the expenses and allowances in the accounting proceeding, be paid to the committee of the person at the rate of $20 a week for application to the incompetent’s maintenance, and that, when the estate will have been so exhausted, a final order be entered discharging the committee of the property.

Such final order was entered on October 20, ;1947.

From said account, the report of the special guardian of the incompetent in that accounting proceeding, and said October 20, 1947, final order, and from the testimony of said “ Edith Lamont ” and said “ Roberta Coutean ” at the December 4, 1947, hearing before me, it appears that said “ Babette Couteau ” is a widow, now seventy-six years of age; that about March 30, 1935, she was placed by the committee of her person in the private nursing home of “ Martha Duncan ”, in Y — Town, New Jersey, and has continuously since been confined there; that her sister is, and since her appointment as commit[739]*739tee of the person has been, a resident of Kings County; that said incompetent likewise was domiciled in Kings County at the time of the adjudication and was then a senile dementia patient in a Long Island private sanitarium; that the assets collected by the committee of the property totaled $41,667.39; that such committee disbursed for the incompetent’s support and maintenance, at first at the rate of $100 a week; then, from August 17, 1934, to June 28, 1935, $50 a week; from July 5, 1935, to January 10,1936, $70 a week; from January 17, 1936, to May 26, 1939, $60 a week; from June 2, 1939, to January 30, 1942, $50 a week; from February 6, 1942, to July 24,1942, $45 a week; from August 7, 1942, to May 26, 1944, $40 a week; from June 2,1944, to April 25,1947, $30 a week; and, for the remaining period up to the October 20,1947, discharge of the committee of the property, a total of only $283.43; also, thqt between June 8, 1934, and June 6,1935, there were paid toward the support and maintenance of said “ Roberta Couteau ” $15 a week and from June 13, 1935, until June 2, 1936, $20 a week; and that in allowance of her claim therefor in the final accounting proceeding there was delivered to her jewelry of the inventory value of $260.

Now that the once ample assets of the incompetent’s estate are exhausted, she can he cared for still in a private nursing home only if funds are forthcoming from other sources; otherwise, she must he transferred to a hospital for the mentally ill maintained by the State of New York and thereupon become a public charge.

It is intimated that “ Martha Duncan ” would continue to care for her at a cost of $30 a week, and that the incompetent’s two sisters (said “ Edith Lamont ” and another sister residing in Chicago, Illinois) would each contribute $10 a week if respondent donate a like sum.

Efforts to effectuate an out-of-court arrangement have failed, because of respondent’s'assertion of financial inability and the manifest antagonism between her and said “ Edith Lamont ”. The latter distrusts the former and resents her successful claim to certain jewelry in the final accounting proceeding; respondent, in turn, feels aggrieved at the exhaustion of the incompetént’s estate by what she regards as too lavish past payments for the incompetent’s care; also, she is embittered by “Edith Lamont’s ” having launched abortive steps to cause abrogation of the adoption during respondent’s minority and needling the foster mother since the onset of senile dementia to revile respondent.

[740]*740Consequently, it is necessary to make formal disposition within the narrow legal limitations and the restricted jurisdiction of this statutory court.

At common law no duty rests even upon a legitimate child to support his fiesh-and-blood parent. (Ulrich v. Ulrich, 136 N. Y. 120, 123; Edwards v. Davis, 16 Johns. 281, 285; Herendeen v. De Witt, 49 Hun 53, 54, 55; Harrigan v. Cahill, 100 Misc. 48, 50; Matter of Salm, 171 Misc. 367, affd. 258 App. Div. 875.) “ By the law of nature a man was bound to take care of his own father and mother; but there being no temporal obligation to enforce the law of nature, it was found necessary to establish it by Act of Parliament ”. (Rex v. Munden, 1 Strange 190; 93 Eng. Rep. 465.) “ The liability of a child to support its parents, who are infirm, destitute, or aged, was created in England and here by statute. _ The statute in that respect created duties unknown to the common law.” (Ulrich v. Ulrich, supra, p. 123.) Nor may such liability, being wholly statutory, be extended beyond the terms of the particular statute creating it. (Edwards v. Davis, supra; Herendeen v. De Witt, supra; Harrigan v. Cahill, supra; 48 C. J., Paupers, § 180, p. 511.)

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192 Misc. 736, 77 N.Y.S.2d 113, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamont-v-couteau-nyfamct-1948.