Citation Numbers: 208 Misc. 5
Judges: Hazleton
Filed Date: 7/19/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/5/2022
In this accounting proceeding, Herbert Pratt Van Ingen, father of Herbert Pratt Van Ingen, Jr., and Serena V. Van Ingen; William Hutton, father of Consuelo Virginia Hutton and Linda Fair Hutton; and Augustus G. Paine, father of Helen Ellis Paine, have petitioned the court to appoint an attorney nominated by them to act as special guardian for their infant children, all of whom are under the age of fourteen years.
Nothing in section 64 expressly authorizes an application by a parent for the appointment of a special guardian. Nevertheless, it is contended by petitioners that this section impliedly contemplates the procedure which they have initiated. They argue that the clause which prohibits the appointment of a special guardian upon the nomination of a party must be construed to mean that one not a party may make such a nomination. With this reasoning this court cannot concur. The obvious purpose of the Legislature in using the specific words employed was simply to emphasize the intent that a special guardian to be appointed under section 64 may not be one who is nominated by any party to the proceeding, with the exception, of course, of a nomination made by an infant over the age of fourteen years. To say that these words of prohibition spell out the authority to pursue the affirmative relief sought under these petitions is to strain their simple meaning far beyond their intendment.
It seems, therefore, that the petitions presented by these parents are unauthorized and must be rejected unless, as peti
Petitioners urge that the provisions of section 203 above quoted, are controlling upon the Surrogate anent the appointment of a special guardian, by virtue of the requirements of section 316 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, which reads: “ § 316. Certain provisions made applicable to proceedings in surrogates’ courts. Except where a contrary intent is expressed in, or plainly implied from the context of this act, a provision of law or of rules, applicable to practice or procedure in the supreme court, applies to surrogates’ courts and to the proceedings therein, so far as they can be applied * * * without regard to its form.”
In effect, the purport of section 316 of the Surrogate’s Court Act is to render applicable to proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court the provisions of the Civil Practice Act in those instances where adequate provision therefor is not found in the Surrogate’s Court Act. Where it appears, however, that complete relief in a given situation can be obtained by recourse to the Surrogate’s Court Act, then no necessity exists to invoke the provisions of the Civil Practice Act. For example, in Matter of Britsch (128 Misc. 219, 220) Surrogate Foley stated: “In proceedings brought exclusively for an accounting the Surrogate’s Court Act, therefore, furnishes complete opportunity for examination and does not require resort to the relief given by the Civil Practice Act.” Similarly, in Matter of Van Valkenburgh (128 Misc. 819, 822), the same learned Surrogate repeated this view when he said: “In Matter of Britsch * * * I pointed out that the provisions of the Civil Practice Act relating to an examination of a party before trial have no application to the examination of a representative under section 263 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, because the Surrogate’s Court Act furnishes complete authority for such an examination.” Of like tenor is the more recent decision in Matter of Shehan (203 Misc. 658), where the court held, at page 659, that “ the relief granted by the Civil Practice Act is not available, ‘ because the
In this court’s judgment, section 64 of the Surrogate’s Court Act furnishes the complete machinery required to protect the interests of these infants who are under the age of fourteen years, by directing the Surrogate to appoint a competent and responsible person to act as special guardian in their behalf. By reason thereof, and in the light of the authorities referred to, no recourse need or should be had to section 203 or any other section of the Civil Practice Act. Section 316 of the Surrogate’s Court Act performs a most useful function when the application of its provisions becomes necessary. Such necessity is lacking here.
The court accordingly declines to entertain these petitions.