Shumsky v. Dime Savings Bank

22 Misc. 2d 20, 190 N.Y.S.2d 274, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3480
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 2d 20 (Shumsky v. Dime Savings Bank) 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
Shumsky v. Dime Savings Bank, 22 Misc. 2d 20, 190 N.Y.S.2d 274, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3480 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Anthony J. Di Giovanna, J.

The decedent, Mike Lawrince, had been a depositor since December 3,1941 in the Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn and since December 3, 1941 in the Brooklyn Savings Bank. It is the plaintiff’s claim that on April 10, 1958 the decedent signed, transferred, set over and gave her the bankbooks and the money on deposit as a gift to be hers forever [21]*21after; that she accepted and retained the bankbooks as her property and that she is now the owner and holder of the bankbooks and is entitled to the withdrawal of the moneys on deposit.

Mike Lawrince died intestate on May 21, 1958 with no known heirs.

This action is vigorously opposed by the Public Administrator who claims that pursuant to section 136-t of the Surrogate’s Court Act he is the only one authorized to take possession of, collect and secure the goods, chattels and personal property and credits of the intestate. It is his claim that a gift was in fact not made by the decedent to the plaintiff and that he, as Public Administrator, is entitled to collect the moneys or, in any event, the plaintiff failed to prove by convincing evidence that a gift was made.

At the trial the plaintiff produced as a witness on her behalf one Mrs. Blanche Yanchis who testified that she visited in the apartment occupied by the plaintiff and Mike Lawrince on April 10, 1958, and that in her presence the decedent handed the two bankbooks to the plaintiff and told her that it was hers to keep as her property and that it was hers to do with as she pleased. Extended cross-examination by the attorney for the Public Administrator did not change this testimony in the slightest degree. The court had the opportunity of observing Mrs. Yanchis upon the witness stand and, on its own, put her through a most searching and comprehensive cross-examination in order to ascertain whether she was telling the truth. The court was convinced that she was and so finds that Mrs. Yanchis told the truth concerning the transaction between the decedent and the plaintiff. It is clear to the court that both the plaintiff and Mrs. Yanchis are not well educated nor possessed of the most gracious social deportment." Nevertheless it was evident that the testimony of both was honest and above board. Mrs. Yanchis is a middle-aged married woman with a family of her own, who lives in the same apartment house with the plaintiff. It is her testimony that during a period of nine years she was accustomed to frequently visit with the plaintiff and Mr. Lawrince and to spend time with them; that she observed their manner of living; that she knew that both were unmarried people but that both occupied the same bedroom. She said that she saw the plaintiff prepare food for Mr. Lawrince and herself, clean the house, take care of the clothing of Mr. Lawrince and do such other things as are commonly done by a wife on behalf of a husband to secure to him the comforts of married life.

[22]*22The court, on its own behalf, rigidly cross-examined Mrs. Tanchis but found no reason to disbelieve or discredit any part of the testimony given by her. When the plaintiff herself was upon the witness stand, the attorney for the Public Administrator opposed testimony by her by reason of the restrictions placed upon her by section 347 of the Civil Practice Act. He, nevertheless, cross-examined her with respect to transactions and matters which bordered closely upon communications or transactions between the parties. On several occasions, where the court sought to ask questions, he objected and the objections were sustained on the basis that those objections transcended the right of testimony by the plaintiff as provided in section 347. Nevertheless, on cross-examination he asked the plaintiff whether it was not a fact that during, a 9 or 10-year continuous period she did live and sleep with Mike Lawrince. Motivation and purpose of a gift such as plaintiff claims must be established before the court can decide whether it was sufficient to induce the deceased'to make such a gift. It appeared that for a year prior to the residency at the present address the plaintiff and the decedent cohabited together more or less at 21 Scholes Street, Brooklyn, where the plaintiff kept and maintained an apartment as tenant. The attorney for the Public Administrator, in objecting to a question asked by the court, stated upon the record that he did not raise any issue as to the fact that the two had resided together in an apartment for a period of 9 or 10 years, but said that he denied having any knowledge as to whether cohabitation and intimacy between them had in fact taken place. It was his purpose, through a most searching cross-examination of the plaintiff, to establish the fact that the decedent was merely a boarder and not one with whom the plaintiff had in fact had more than merely the relationship of landlord and boarder.

I find, however, that the testimony clearly establishes that for a period of 9 or 10 years the plaintiff extended herself to provide to Mike Lawrince all of the comforts of married life without the benefit of a marriage ceremony; that she provided him with tjie preparation of food, with care of his clothing, with cleanliness of the apartment, and, as shown by the answer given to the attorney for the Public Administrator’s question, the comforts of connubial bliss.

The plaintiff is 56 years of age; the decedent was 66 years of age at the time of his death. The plaintiff does not present an overbright picture of mentality but appears to be a clean, simple woman who undertook to and did provide Mr. Lawrince with care and affection during a 10-year period of his life when he [23]*23most needed it. The moneys in the bank were accumulated by him from his earnings and, during the latter period of his life, from a pension fund. During a great portion of the period, these two people lived together and the expenses of the apartment were paid by both with moneys kept in a box for that purpose. Mr. Lawrince, having reached the age of 66, according to the testimony, felt that there was no sense in his making the necessary trips to his savings account to withdraw money and, according to the testimony, presented the bankbooks to the plaintiff so that she could own the money and do with it as she pleased for the purpose of taking care of the apartment and the necessary comforts of both. There are no other heirs known to exist. The decedent apparently was alone in this world except for the plaintiff.

To me the testimony in this case meets the test required in these cases. The plaintiff has established her case by a fair preponderance of the evidence. Her testimony and the testimony of Mrs. Yanchis is clear and convincing proof that Mr. Lawrince did present the bankbooks to the plaintiff, and when he did so, he did it with the intention of making an outright gift to her. The court finds that it was his intention to do so because of the many years of service given to him by the plaintiff to his benefit and his love and affection for her.

The minor variances in the testimony by the plaintiff and the records and deposition presented by the Public Administrator do not affect the result one whit. The questions as to whether the bankbooks were in one part of the dresser or in another, and as to other matters appearing in the deposition which seem to vary somewhat with the testimony at the trial are of slight consequence. The questionnaire, signed by the plaintiff when she visited the office of the Public Administrator, was completely filled out by a clerk in the office of the Public Administrator and then the plaintiff was asked to sign it.

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Related

In re Estate of Nabif
69 A.D.2d 904 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 2d 20, 190 N.Y.S.2d 274, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shumsky-v-dime-savings-bank-nysupct-1959.