State v. Seventh Regiment Fund

13 Misc. 3d 222
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Misc. 3d 222 (State v. Seventh Regiment Fund) 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
State v. Seventh Regiment Fund, 13 Misc. 3d 222 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard F. Braun, J.

One significant part of the history of our state is found in its artifacts. The New York State Attorney General brought this action on behalf of plaintiff State of New York against defendant Seventh Regiment Fund on November 18, 1996, pursuant to Executive Law § 63-c (1), to uphold plaintiffs claim of ownership of many historical artifacts, which plaintiff contends that it holds in trust for all of the people of our state. Plaintiff seeks a judgment declaring that it is the owner of that personal property received by the 107th Infantry Regiment, New York National Guard, not by bequest, which is in the possession of defendant Fund; ordering an immediate return of the property to plaintiff; and ordering restitution, damages, and a surcharge for those items of property lost, damaged, or destroyed due to the fault or negligence of any member of defendant Fund. Defendant Fund asserts that it alone should have title to the property, and interposed counterclaims for a declaration in defendant Fund’s favor1 and injunctive relief. The second counterclaim was discontinued by stipulation.

The Seventh Regiment refers to a New York State Army National Guard unit first organized in 1806, reorganized and designated as the “7th Regiment of Infantry (National Guard)” in 1847, and redesignated as the “107th Infantry Regiment, New York National Guard” at the beginning of World War I. The Seventh Regiment is now named the “107th Support Group of the New York Army National Guard.” The Seventh Regiment has often been called the “Silk Stocking Regiment” because of its ties to socially prominent New York families. Defendant Fund was incorporated in 1909 and is charged with taking care of the Seventh Regiment’s property.

Since the 1870s, the Seventh Regiment National Guard unit has occupied the armory at 643 Park Avenue between 66th and 67th Streets in Manhattan. That is also the location of defendant Fund’s office. The New York City Landmarks Preservation [224]*224Commission has designated most of the armory as a landmark. The armory contains many valuable historical artifacts, which the parties estimated to be valued at $6 million to $10 million.

On February 29, 1952, the board of officers of the 107th resolved to transfer to defendant Fund title to all personal property in the armory, including military trophies, prizes, decorations, silverware, emblems, flags, mementos, paintings, portraits, etchings, prints, sculptures, other works of art, documents, and the library, except for property title of which was held by the United States Army or individual component company units of the 107th. The resolution stated that the consideration for the sale would be one dollar. On March 1, 1952, the 107th conveyed the property, per the resolution, to defendant Fund for the expressed consideration “of One Dollar ($1.00) and other good and valuable considerations.” Documents from 1952 and 1953 show that the reason for this conveyance was the concern of the board of officers of the 107th that the unit would be called into federal service to fight in the Korean War, and thus the board wanted the valuable property of the 107th placed with the defendant Fund for safekeeping. On March 21, 1952, the regimental commander of the Seventh Regiment told the veterans at their quarterly meeting that an “outstanding accomplishment” had been the transfer of the regimental property to defendant Fund “in view of the possibility of increasing Federal control” of the Seventh Regiment.

Only three items of personalty claimed by defendant Fund were received by bequest to the 107th: “a large silver vase, crossed rifles and crossed guns with insignia,” a “Busse memorial trophy for the encouragement of rifle practice,” and a “Courtney S. Busse trophy, awarded for attendance.” Neither the documentary nor testimonial evidence demonstrated any other bequests.

Over the years, several inventories have been made of personal property in the armory, including one by defendant Fund’s curators. Defendant Fund placed numbers, and stickers stating “Property of Seventh Regt Fund” on a small percentage of property in the armory. Plaintiff had a superintendent at the armory who observed defendant Fund’s stickers on the items. However, he was not responsible for historical property in the armory. At times, some of the property was removed from the armory by defendant Fund for repairs and then returned to the armory. Four valuable paintings, including three by Sanford Gifford, are on loan by defendant Fund to The Metropolitan [225]*225Museum of Art, and photographs of several paintings in the armory appear in publications about the Civil War. Defendant Fund was credited in the museum and the publications as the owner of the paintings. One other painting has been sold by defendant Fund.

In 1984, defendant Fund sued the then Governor of New York State to enjoin the proposed expansion of a homeless shelter in the armory (Veterans of Seventh Regiment v Cuomo, Sup Ct, NY County, Index No. 7098/84). In the complaint therein, defendant Fund as a plaintiff there claimed that it owned personal property in the armory, which plaintiff admitted in its answer to the complaint.2 Defendant Fund asserts that this showed that in 1984 plaintiff had notice of defendant Fund’s claim of ownership of the property at issue. Plaintiff contends that because ownership of the property that is the subject of this action was not at issue in the 1984 action, and it was undisputed that defendant Fund owned a substantial collection of other property in the armory, the answer in that action did not give plaintiff notice of any claim of defendant Fund that it owned the subject property.

On June 4, 1996, the director of plaintiff’s Military History Task Force went to the armory to inventory the property there. He was prevented from doing so by defendant Fund’s vice-president, David Dalva, and its then curator, Lisa Weilbacker. The director was not given access to the armory’s personal property and was told by the curator that he could not see the property because it was owned by defendant Fund. In response to a June 14, 1996 letter from the State of New York Office of the Attorney General, the attorney for defendant Fund stated that it only held property to which defendant Fund had clear legal title, and that a visit by plaintiff to the armory to do an inventory would be allowed only if plaintiff acknowledged that the personal property in the armory was owned by defendant Fund.

[226]*226Under Military Law § 241,3 a unit of the New York State organized militia has the right to take property by bequest for the militia’s uses and purposes as a military organization, and to dispose of the property. The organized militia includes the New York National Guard (see Military Law § 2 [1]). The New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs (DMNA), which includes the organized militia (Executive Law § 190 [2]), is part of the Executive Department (Executive Law § 31 [2]) of New York State (Executive Law § 30). The New York State Adjutant General is the head of the DMNA (Executive Law § 190 [1]). The Seventh Regiment is an unincorporated association, which is capable of holding property (Military Law § 260 [1]). Plaintiff is not claiming a right to property bequeathed to defendant Fund.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Misc. 3d 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-seventh-regiment-fund-nysupct-2006.