Matter of Liongson-Branch

2024 NY Slip Op 30586(U)
CourtSurrogate's Court, New York County
DecidedFebruary 22, 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 30586(U) (Matter of Liongson-Branch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Surrogate's Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Liongson-Branch, 2024 NY Slip Op 30586(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Matter of Liongson-Branch 2024 NY Slip Op 30586(U) February 22, 2024 Surrogate's Court, New York County Docket Number: File No. 2013-3328/D Judge: Hilary Gingold Cases posted with a "30000" identifier, i.e., 2013 NY Slip Op 30001(U), are republished from various New York State and local government sources, including the New York State Unified Court System's eCourts Service. This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official publication. New York County Surrogate's Court DATA ENTRY DEPT. SURROGATE'S COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NEW YORK FEB 1·2 2024 -----------------------------------------x In the Matter of the Petition of Lee R. Bember as a person interested in the Estate of DECISION AFTER TRIAL LYDIA LIONGSON-BRANCH, File No.: 2013-3328/D Deceased,

for the Discovery and Turnover of Property. -----------------------------------------x

GING OLD, S.

In this reverse discovery and turnover proceeding (SCPA 2105)

in the estate of Lydia Liongson-Branch (Decedent), petitioner Lee

R. Bember (Bember) alleged that he is a person interested in this

estate as the "previously listed and intended beneficiary of

certain of decedent's accounts held at Ally Bank," that Decedent's

daughter, respondent Yolly M. Keane (Keane), the administrator of

Decedent's estate, amended, altered, or changed the listed

beneficiary on the accounts from Sember to that of the estate and

that the accounts should be turned over to him. Keane denied the

allegations.

Decedent died on October 27, 2012, as the result of an

accident. Letters of administration were issued to Keane by the

Connecticut Probate Court. Thereafter, this court issued letters

of administration with limitations to Keane for the sole purpose

[* 1] of prosecuting an action for Decedent's personal injury and

wrongful death in New York State Supreme Court, New York County

(Index No. 158981/13).

In this SCPA 2105 proceeding, a non-jury trial was held on

February 8, 2024, before the undersigned. Bember was self-

represented. Keane appeared by counsel. Bember testified in

narrative form for himself and then was cross-examined by Keane's

attorney. After Bember rested, Keane testified and was cross-

examined by Bember. Matthew Sakkas (Sakkas), the attorney retained

by Keane in the Supreme Court action, also testified on Keane's

behalf. Bember declined to cross-examine Sakkas.

At no time during the proceeding, including during the trial,

did Bember produce any documentary evidence to support his

allegations, and his trial testimony was devoid of even an iota of

such evidence.

Three exhibits, introduced by Keane's attorney, were admitted

into evidence. The first, "Resp's 1", is Bember's letter, dated

April 7, 2022, to the court, the original of which was previously

filed with the court. In that letter, Bember stated that Decedent

was his aunt. However, on cross-examination, Bember admitted that

his statement was false. Rather, he testified that he and Decedent

had a romantic involvement.

"Resp's 2" in evidence is the Affidavit Responding to Subpoena

to Testify and Produce Documents, sworn to on July 18, 2 02 3, by

[* 2] Jacqueline Lemma (Lemma), Director - Deposit Operations of Ally

Bank, with documents attached. According to her sworn affidavit,

Lemma described her duties as supervision and oversight of the

Escheatment and Document Processing teams for Ally Bank, including

legal orders and subpoena reviews.

Bember did not dispute having been served with a copy of the

documents, along with all relevant exhibits, prior to trial. Lemma

avers in her affidavit that Ally conducted a search for documents

responsive to the three separate subpoenas duces tecum served on

Ally Bank by Bember's prior counsel and/or by Keane's attorney.

Each of the subpoenas duces tecum called for Ally to produce

documents from January 1, 2010, more than two-and-a-half-years

prior to Decedent's death, to present, in connection with Bember's

Two of the subpoenas duces tecum, copies of which are attached

to Lemma's affidavit, called for the production of documents about

any accounts of any type at Ally Bank or any related institution

of Decedent in any ownership form, whether jointly or otherwise,

any amendments, changes or alterations, the beneficiary

designations, amendments or changes to beneficiary designations,

any allegations, investigations and determinations, and all

documents connected to accounts in Decedent's name or any

permutation thereof. The third subpoena duces tecum, a copy of

which is also attached to Lemma's affidavit, required production

[* 3] of documents with respect to accounts in Bember's name, including

any accounts in trust for him or on which he was the named

beneficiary.

Ally Bank's responses to the three subpoenas duces tecum show

that it "had no record of any account in the name of Lydia Liongson-

Branch" or of any accounts in Bember's name or of which he was a

beneficiary. Also attached to Lemma's affidavit are eight pages

produced by Ally Bank of typewritten notes of personnel, including

supervisors, showing that Bember was informed, in response to

telephone calls from him to Ally Bank, on more than thirty

occasions, that Ally Bank had no record of any accounts, including

trust accounts, belonging to Decedent, and. also, on multiple

occasions, that there was no records of accounts on which Bember

was a beneficiary.

Additionally, although not pled, Bember raised at a

conference before the undersigned and again during his trial

testimony, that he was the beneficiary of a Vantis Life Insurance

Contract (Vantis Contract) owned by Decedent. As was the case

with the Ally Bank accounts, Bember produced no documentary

evidence in support of his claim, and his testimony was devoid of

any other evidence that would support his allegations in this

regard. In contrast, Resp's 3 in evidence is the Business Records

Affidavit, sworn to on February 5, 2024, by Zandra Rawlins-Adens

(Rawlins-Adens), a paralegal in the law department for The Penn

[* 4] Mutual Life Insurance Company (Penn). Attached to Rawlins-Adens'

affidavit are nineteen pages of records kept by Penn in the normal

course of business. These documents make clear that there was no

such policy issued by Penn in which Bember was ever identified as

a beneficiary. In the affidavit, Rawlins-Adens swears that these

nineteen pages "are exact duplicates of the original records for

the subject Vant is Life Insurance Contract." Nowhere in the

documents is there any mention of Bember, as a beneficiary or

otherwise. At trial, Sakkas testified that these documents were

produced in response to a subpoena duces tecum.

SCPA 2105(1) provides:

A person having a claim to property as defined in [SCPA] 103 or the proceeds thereof alleged to be in possession of or under the control of a fiduciary may present to the court which has jurisdiction over the estate a petition showing the facts and praying that the fiduciary be required to show cause why he should not be required to deliver the property or the proceeds thereof.

Bember, as petitioner, bears the burden of establishing title

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Related

In re the Estate of Effross
43 A.D.2d 539 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1973)
In re the Estate of Poggemeyer
87 A.D.2d 822 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 30586(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-liongson-branch-nysurctnyc-2024.