There are two proceedings before the court: an application by brothers and sisters of the decedent to revoke the letters of administration heretofore issued to Licia Anna De Camillis on the ground that she made misstatements of material facts in respect of domicile and her status as the widow of the decedent; secondly, a discovery proceeding instituted by the administratrix against Chemical Bank New York Trust Company (hereinafter Chemical) and Banca Commerciale Italiana (hereinafter BCI) to recover a certain sum allegedly on deposit with Chemical in the name of the decedent. At the beginning of the hearing, the parties raised the question of the
The administratrix (hereinafter, the respondent) filed a petition for letters of administration on November 8, 1968, alleging that she was the widow and sole distributee of the decedent, that he died domiciled at 270 Riverside Drive in.the County of New York, and that he left personal property in the County of New York with an estimated value of $223,000. The fact is — and it is now undisputed — that the decedent was domiciled in San Remo, Italy, at the time of his death, and for many years prior thereto. The respondent admits that fact in her answer. It is also conceded that the decedent had obtained a decree of annulment of his marriage to the respondent in the Republic of San Marino on January 7, 1956, but the respondent contends that such annulment was invalid and that she remained the lawful wife of the decedent up to the time of his death. It was established at the hearing that at the time of his death the decedent had no property in the State of New York, except for certain property of relatively small value which appeared to have been abandoned by him, the situs of which will be discussed hereinafter.
The decedent maintained two time-deposit accounts, with total dollar credits of $203,480 in the Milan main branch of BCI. He died on May 23, 1968 in San Remo. In August, 1968, some three months after his death, the respondent opened a checking account at a branch of Chemical located at 441 Columbus Avenue in the City of New York. The respondent had a personal account with Chemical at another branch. She presented herself at the Columbus Avenue branch on August 13 and arranged to open an account in the name of the decedent alone. According to the assistant manager of that branch, the respondent ‘ ‘ had requested two signature cards and she was going to see her husband in Italy, who was ill, and she would return the signature cards. ’ ’ The account was opened with a deposit of the respondent’s personal check in the amount of $20. The respondent admits the visit to the bank, but denies the representations respecting her husband’s condition. On September 12, 1968
Meanwhile the respondent mailed a letter to BCI in Italy, purportedly signed by the decedent, bearing no date, requesting BCI “ to transfer as soon as possible the total amount of the two blocked accounts to my New York Bank: Chemical Bank New York Trust-Account No. 072-202610-441 Columbus Avenue, New York 10024, N. Y. Furthermore also include the interest earned and debit me your costs.”
BCI maintained substantial deposits with Chemical, and it cabled Chemical to credit the sum of $203,480 to the “ De Camillis Giuseppe Account 072-202610 ” at Chemical’s 441 Columbus Avenue branch and to debit BCI’s account with that sum. Chemical accordingly made the transfers, crediting- the joint account with a deposit of $203,480. Subsequently, BCI learned of the death of the decedent and instructed Chemical to reverse the entries. Chemical refused to pay the respondent and refused the request of BCI to reverse the entries pending a determination of the respective rights of all concerned. Thereafter, and in November, 1968, the respondent obtained letters of administration from this court. BCI and Chemical contend that the Surrogate’s Court of New York County has no jurisdiction over the estate of this nondomiciliary decedent because he left no property in the County of New York at the time of his death and no property of his remains unadministered in New York County.
Prior to the issuance of letters by this court, and on July 12, 1968, the brothers and sisters of the decedent, in accordance with Italian law and procedure, appeared before a notary of San Remo, declaring that the decedent died without any known will, that his marriage to the respondent was annulled by decision of the Law Commissioner of the Republic of San Marino on January 7, 1956, that the annulment was declared enforceable in the Republic of Italy by decision of the Court of Appeals of Naples on June 20,1958, and recorded in the marriage records of Naples, and that the decedent’s legal heirs were his brothers and sisters, whose names are stated therein. It is the contention
The respondent contends that the letter to BCI and the signature cards were actually signed by the decedent. She and the decedent had been .separated, he living in San Remo and she in New York. The respondent went to San Remo during the first part of May 1968, the month in which the decedent died. Her contention is that the decedent wanted her to return and that he gave the bank letter to her sister in Italy, to be held by the sister and delivered to the respondent when she came to Italy. The suggestion is that this course of action was devised to induce the respondent to return to Italy and to the decedent. It is claimed that her sister delivered the document to the respondent when she arrived in Italy. Obviously, the account number could not have been placed in the letter by the decedent because no such account existed in May, 1968. The respondent testified that everything was in the letter when it was delivered to her except the account number, and that she later added the account number. She also admitted that she had placed in the letter the address of the decedent as being at the Gramercy Hotel in New York, a place where he had never lived. The original letter is typed and there is no indication on its face that insertions were later made in the text. It gives the appearance of uninterrupted and complete typing of the entire body of the letter. It is undisputed that the letter was mailed to BCI by the respondent after the death .of the decedent. It is also evident that when the respondent added to the letter the words: ‘ ‘ My present address is: Gramercy Hotel, 137 East 24th Street, New York City”, the necessary implication was that the decedent was living at the time the letter was sent. This was a patent misrepresentation.
It is argued by the .respondent that there are two other items of property which were located in New York County and would give this court jurisdiction to appoint an administrator, even if the BCI deposit were ignored. One of the items was a deposit of $46.50 in the East Brooklyn Savings Bank, which was later transferred to the abandoned property fund. The office of the East Brooklyn Savings Bank is in the County of Kings, and
There is a sharp conflict among the parties with respect to the genuineness of the signature of the decedent on the two cards submitted to Chemical and on the letter sent to BCI. The petitioners in the revocation proceeding produced a handwriting expert who testified very positively that the signatures were forgeries and that the cards bore evidence of a tracing of the decedent’s signature thereon. The respondent produced a handwriting expert who stoutly maintained that the signatures were the genuine signatures of the decedent. It cannot be denied that there are suspicious features of the letter to BCI, such as the text which the respondent concedes that she inserted after the death of the decedent, other text which obviously she must have inserted, and the appearance of the instrument with its uninterrupted and even flowing type. However, it is not necessary now to determine whether the signatures were actually those of the decedent or were brazen forgeries. The unimpeached evidence in this record requires the finding that the respondent was guilty of making fraudulent misrepresentations to Chemical and to BCI. She clearly represented to Chemical that the decedent was alive when she opened the account in his name. The credible testimony shows that she made explicit representations. However, even if the respondent’s version of the transaction were accepted, her actions plainly amounted to a representation that the depositor in whose name the account was being opened was living on the day that she took cards from the bank for the purpose of obtaining his signature. The respondent plainly represented to BCI that the decedent was living on the day that the letter was sent to BCI. She admits that she inserted in the letter the statement that he was then residing at the named hotel,
The respondent was also guilty of misrepresentations to this court. She represented that the decedent was domiciled in New York County when she knew that he never lived in New York County and that in fact he was domiciled in Italy at the time of his death. She failed to make a complete statement of the facts respecting her relations with the decedent, particularly his having obtained a decree annulling the marriage and her institution of proceedings against the heirs of the decedent in Italy to. declare the annulment void and to permit her to participate in the estate. She failed to advise the court of the proceedings which had, to her knowledge, been taken in Italy, the decedent’s undisputed domicile.
By “jurisdiction” we mean the power and authority of a court to hear and determine a judicial proceeding. (Bumstead v. Read,
In the estate now before the court, there being no property of the decedent within this county on the date of his death, the question must be whether pr operty of this decedent came into this county after his death and remains unadministered, within the meaning of and scope of SCPA 206. The text of section 206, insofar as the present problem is concerned, remains unchanged since its enactment as section 2476 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section conferred jurisdiction upon the Surrogate’s Court over the estate of a nondomiciliary who owned property ‘‘ which has since his death come into the State, and remains unadministered.” Section 2476 was construed by the Court of Appeals in Hoes v. New York, New Haven & Hartford R. R. Co. (
A similar ruling was made in Pietraroia v. New Jersey & Hudson Riv. Ry. & Ferry Co. (
Lapiedra v. American Sur. Co. (
Nothing to the contrary was decided in O’Connor v. Huggins (
The other cited case, Matter of McCabe, dealt with property brought into the State by a duly appointed foreign administrator, and held that such property did not remain ‘ ‘ unadministered ’ ’. The words in the 'statute, “ and remains unadministered ”, which were added by the Code of Civil Procedure, were intended to codify earlier decisions and make it clear that a grant of administration cannot be founded upon funds which are brought here or transmitted here in due course of administration by a foreign fiduciary. (Throop’s Notes, Code Civ. Pro., 1881,
It is argued that a different result was reached in Matter of Hughes (
The Hughes decision was distinguished in the Hoes case on the ground that in Matter of Hughes the finding was that the act was without wrongful intent, there were no persons interested in distribution except those in New York, there were no unpaid
The extent to which fraud will so invalidate a decree or judgment that it is subject to collateral attack rather than to an equitable proceeding to set it aside, is a subject on which there are varying views, or at least some imprecision in statement. (1 Freeman, Judgments [5th ed.], § 331.) Sometimes when a court speaks of lack of jurisdiction, it means only that a court will no,t generally exercise that jurisdiction in given circumstances. Thus it is said that while a State does have recognizable jurisdiction over a chattel which the owner has been induced by fraud to send into the State, the court will not generally exercise that jurisdiction. (Restatement, Conflict of Laws 2d, § 60, Comment c; Restatement, Judgments, § 32, Comment c.)
We need not now decide whether fraud such as revealed in this case deprives the court of jurisdiction essential to a valid decree or only makes it necessary for a State to decline to exercise jurisdiction over property within its borders, a course ‘ ‘ alike demanded by a sense of justice and the comity of States ’ ’ (Matter of Hughes, supra, p. 62). The conduct of the respondent in this case constituted a fraud upon the court, was in fraud of the rights of the relatives in Italy where an administration was being conducted in accordance with the law of the domicile, and was fraudulent as to BCI, rendering it liable to persons in Italy and possibly to the Italian Government. Under such circumstances this court cannot exercise jurisdiction over this estate, at least under present circumstances. Its plain duty is to direct return of the property held by Chemical to the domicile of the decedent.
The court accordingly holds that the letters of administration heretofore issued must be revoked. The petition in the discovery proceeding is dismissed. Pursuant to the authority granted in SCPA 2104 (subd. 5), the court will direct Chemical to credit the funds to BCI, as originally credited. The respondent will be directed to return to the State of New York such property as she collected under letters heretofore issued to her.
