Lavelle v. Corrignio

33 N.Y.S. 376, 86 Hun 135, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 135, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 122
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 N.Y.S. 376 (Lavelle v. Corrignio) 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
Lavelle v. Corrignio, 33 N.Y.S. 376, 86 Hun 135, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 135, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 122 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

This action was brought for the partition of cer- - tain real estate in the city of New York, the property in her lifetime of one Ann Owens. Upon her death, Ann Owens left, her surviving, two sisters, Mary Hardy, who died without issue shortly after the death of Ann Owens, and Rosanna Coy, born Hardy, who died in 1867, leaving, her surviving, three children, Ellen, Catherine, and Mary Ann Coy. Ellen Corrignio and Mary Isabella Corrignio, though not originally parties to the action, were brought into it upon their own motion, claiming that they were the children and sole heirs at law of Mary Ann Coy, who, as we have seen, was a niece of Ann Owens. The question whether the Corrignios were the children of Mary Ann Coy was, with a number of other distinct issues framed in the action, left to the jury, and their verdict was against the claim advanced by the Corrignios; and it is upon the ground that such verdict was against the weight of evidence, and upon the further ground of newly-discovered evidence, that the two motions were made for a new trial, from the denial of which appeals are taken. In disposing of the first, viz. the motion for a new trial upon the minutes, a reference to the facts is necessary. It was conceded that Mary Ann Coy was a niece of Ann Owens; and, in order to establish their claim of heirship to Ann Owens, it was therefore only necessary for the Corrignios to show that they were the children or issue of Mary Ann Coy. To prove this they produced the testimony of their father, their own testimony, and that of five other witnesses not related to them, all of which was taken by commission in New Orleans, where the Corrignios live. Their testimony, in substance, was that Ellen and Mary Isabella Corrignio were the children, born Out of wedlock, of Mary Ann Coy and Dimitry Corrignio; that up to the time of the death of their mother, in 1877, they had always lived with and been recognized by her and Dimitry Corrignio as their children, and by their aunts, Ellen Ponds (formerly Coy) and [378]*378Catherine Coy, as their nieces; that since, the death of their mother they have resided with their father, and been treated by him and by their neighbors as the children of Dimitry Corrignio and Mary Ann Coy; that in 1877, while their mother was on her deathbed, a clergyman of the Greek Church was sent for, and a marriage was solemnized between Mary Ann Coy and Dimitry Corrignio, for the express purpose of legitimating the three children who had been born to them out of wedlock, one of whom, Dimitry, Jr., died soon after the death of Mary Ann Coy (or Corrignio). Two of the witnesses stated that they were present when the ceremonial marriage took place at her deathbed between Mary Ann Coy and Dimitry Corrignio, in 1877; that they were there as witnesses, and it was then stated that one of the reasons for the marriage was the desire both had of legitimating their three children, Ellen, Mary Isabella, and Dimitry, Jr. These witnesses also testified to the fact that they had known the children since they were, born, and knew that they had lived with the man and woman whose marriage they witnessed, and that the latter had always spoken to and of them as their children. In addition there was produced the certificate of the marriage, taken from the records of the church, which states that the marriage was had for the purpose of legitimating the three children who had been born out of marriage, naming them, and giving their ages; and also the baptismal certificate of Ellen, also from the records of the church, showing that-she was baptized as a child of Dimitry Corrignio and Mary Ann Coy, and that their father and mother were both present at the baptism. These certificates are fortified by the testimony of the clergyman who furnished them, and who states that they are correct extracts from the records of his church. We have also the testimony of the clergyman who performed the marriage ceremony, which corroborates that of the witnesses in reference ;to the solemnization of the marriage, and the purposes for which it was done.

As against these eight witnesses and this documentary evidence we have the testimony of Ellen Ponds and Catherine Coy, who, as we have stated, were the two sisters of Mary Ann Coy. Their testimony was taken before the. Corrignios had been made parties to this action, and is to the effect that their sister Mary Ann Coy died without issue. Of these two, the one in the best position to know was Catherine Coy, who, it appears, was accustomed frequently to visit her sister Mary Ann-during her lifetime; whereas between the Corrignios and Ellen the same custom of visiting did not prevail, and although she visited her sister at intervals, and thus must have had some knowledge of the situation and surroundings of Mary Ann Coy, yet she was not in as good position to know the household of the Corrignios and how it was made up as was her sister Catherine. Ellen Ponds’ testimony was that Mary Ann Coy “left no issue that she knew' of”; and that of Catherine was to the effect that. Mary Ann died without issue. This witness, however, was not one that should impress a jury as against more credible witnesses, it appearing that for many years [379]*379she had been an inmate of a house of ill repute. It may be said with respect to all the witnesses introduced that they were not present at the birth of these children, and their testimony was hearsay, and that it does not appear but that they were, by reason' of their friendship to the Corrignios, to some extent interested in their favor. But, conceding all this, - we must nevertheless keep in mind the fact that relationship such as is here sought to be established, in most cases, in the absence of better evidence, is required to be established by hearsay; and in this respect the Corrignios are in no different position than some of the other parties to this case. But if we eliminate the testimony of the father and of the girls themselves, and all the other witnesses except that of the two clergymen and the church records, we fail to see why that was not sufficient to have inclined the jury in favor of the Corrignios, considering that the only evidence against them was the testimony of their two aunts, and that, taken as a whole, very uncertain in quality. The records were made, one in 1877, when Mary Ann’Coy was married to Dimitry Corrignio, which fact was abundantly proved, and about which there is no dispute, and the other upon the baptism of the child Ellen Corrignio;. both of them being made at a time when it could not have been foreseen that they were ever likely to be available or of use in establishing the right of the persons affected thereby to any interest in the property of Ann Owens. These records, fortified as they are by the statement of the person who now has possession-of them, that they are true records of his church, corroborated by the clergyman who performed the marriage ceremony, who-testifies that he remembers the circumstance and that the statement in the records is correct, are rather strong evidence in favor of the claim advanced by the Corrignios, and entitled to great weight by a jury, as against that of two sisters, one of whom is; now to be discredited, and the other of whom upon insufficient knowledge merely stated that her sister Mary Ann Coy left no issue that she knew of. It may be, as suggested by the respondent, that a good deal of the testimony in support of the claim of the Corrignios has been manufactured; but certainly there is nothing, so far as the testimony of the -clergymen and the records of the-church are concerned, that in the slightest way would indicate that either spoke falsely.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.Y.S. 376, 86 Hun 135, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 135, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavelle-v-corrignio-nysupct-1895.