Judges: Falco, Samuel
Filed Date: 1/11/1961
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The petition of the accounting administrator seeks a decree determining that the husband of the decedent has forfeited his distributive share of the estate because of his abandonment of the decedent and his neglect and refusal to provide for her. (Decedent Estate Law, § 87-, subd. [c].) The husband is confined to a State hospital having been duly admitted to the hospital pursuant to the provisions of law. No committee of the person or property of the husband has ever been appointed. He is represented in this proceeding by a special guardian.
The petitioner offered the testimony of one of the sons of the decedent and respondent, and also the records of the Domestic Relations Court of the City of New York. The special guardian objected to the testimony of the witness under section 347 of the Civil Practice Act, and to the introduction in evidence of the court file.
In Clark v. Dada (183 App. Div. 253, 262) the Appellate Division said in its opinion that in a case where an incompetent person has been committed to a State hospital but had never been adjudicated a lunatic and had no committee of his person or property, section 347 does not disqualify a party from testifying to a personal transaction with him. In Matter of Harkavy (184 Misc. 742) and in Matter of Musczak (196 Misc. 364), the Surrogates ruled that section 347 does disqualify an interested party from testifying to a personal transaction with an incompetent in such a case, the statements in Ciarle v. Dada being characterized as dictum. In the pending case, the testimony of the witness was taken subject to a motion to strike it out. Wholly apart from the question of the competency of the witness to testify to a personal transaction with the respondent, his testimony, even if competent, does not establish an abandonment of the decedent by her husband. The Surrogate’s conclusion in Matter of Oppenheim (178 Misc. 1035, 1036) may aptly be restated here: “ Taking the facts * * * to be true, the decedent may be said to have been justified in leaving the respondent. Such facts, too, might have warranted a judgment of separation in the decedent’s favor on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment or conduct rendering it unsafe for her to cohabit with him. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1161, subds. 1, 2.) Under no recognized theory of law, however*, will the facts sustain a finding of abandonment of decedent by the respondent. ’ ’
Under some circumstances, an unexplained failure of a husband to contribute to the support of his wife might give rise to an inference of fault upon his part. Here, however, the respondent is confined in a State hospital, and he has been so confined since 1954. His testimony is not available. The court records do not indicate any judicial action after the suspension of the order of December 26,1941.
The burden of proving that the respondent forfeited his share of the estate is upon the petitioner. (Matter of Chandler, 175 Misc. 1029,1034 and cases cited.) In determining the extent of a husband’s obligation to contribute to the support of his wife, there must be taken into account the ability of the husband
The petition requests the court to fix the compensation of the attorney for the administrator. The court will reserve that question for determination on the settlement of the decree. The attorney is directed to file an affidavit of legal services. Submit decree on notice settling the account accordingly.