70 Misc. 2d 51 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1972
In a proceeding for leave to sell certain personal property of the decedent, this is a motion by the respondent Christa Ruthe Fay for a trial by jury as to the issue of her status and the status of Violet Josephine Buck as distributees of the estate; for separate trials of these issues and for the adjournment of the trial concerning her status.
It appears that the request for adjournment of the trial has been withdrawn since the parties have entered into a stipulation setting the trial down for June 27, 1972. Furthermore, all parties agree and this court is in accord with the request for separate trials of the status of movant and respondent Buck. Accordingly, that branch of the motion which requests separate trials is granted and the trial of the status of Christa Ruthe Fay shall take place on the agreed date and shall be prior to any trial of the status of the other respondent.
In Matter of Hamilton (76 Hun 200), the question was whether appellant was the widow of decedent and entitled to take part in a probate proceeding. The court said (p. 204): “It is a very familiar rule in the conduct of a trial of cases, particularly those in the nature of equity proceedings, where there is a preliminary question as to the right of one of the parties either to bring the action or to intervene as a defendant, to try such question and to determine the status of the parties before attempting to pass upon the final rights in respect to which the action is brought. Such is the foundation of almost all interlocutory judgments in equity actions, except those entered upon demurrers.
“ In actions for a partnership accounting, it is familiar practice where the partnership is denied, as to one of the parties, to first try the question of partnership before allowing such party claiming to be a partner to vex the court and the other parties to the litigation with his presence in a controversy in which he may have no interest ’ ’. The same rule was applied in a probate proceeding.
In Matter of McGarren (112 App. Div. 503 [1906]) a lady whose marriage had been annulled by judgment sought revocation of letters of administration upon the estate of her former husband. A question arose as to the validity of the annul
The late Surrogate Delehakty, in a scholarly opinion, reviewed the right to jury trial in the Surrogate’s Court in a decision which was unanimously affirmed in the Appellate Division and in the Court of Appeals (Matter of Leary, 175 Misc. 254, affd. 260 App. Div. 1000, affd. 285 N. Y. 693). Citing the text of the New York State Constitutions of 1846, 1894 and 1938, Surrogate Delehanty clearly showed (p. 256) that the effect of the text of the Constitutions “is to continue the constitutional guaranty of jury trial only in the degree that such jury trials were assured prior to the adoption of the 1938 Constitution. Unless, therefore, the state of the law was such as to entitle petitioner here to a jury trial in 1894 there is now no constitutional right to such a trial ”.
Under existing statutes, as well as under earlier forms of the statutes, there is no right to trial by jury in the Surrogate’s Court (except in a probate proceeding) unless the right is a constitutional right which the Legislature is powerless to deny (SCPA 502, subd. 1). The reference in the statute to a right to trial by jury in a proceeding in which a person has a constitutional right of trial by jury is, as Professor Siegel has pointed out, merely a reminder and not a grant of any right (McKinney’s Cons. Laws of N. Y., Book 58A, Practice Commentary, § 502).
In the pending case, the question of status arose in a proceeding for permission to sell a co-operative apartment at a stated price. The respondent originally opposed the sale of the property. She claims to be the widow of the decedent by virtue of a common-law marriage and to be entitled to his entire intestate estate and, in addition, claimed the co-operative apartment by virtue of a gift from the decedent. She asked that the maintenance charges be paid pending a determination of her rights. It is patent that if she succeeded in either of her contentions, she would be entitled to the property. Her claim of gift would have a more solid base if made between husband and wife. While the issues were being framed, the market for co-operatives declined and the favorable contract was lost. When a new buyer was found, though at a lower sales price, the respondent was willing to consent to a sale of the property, but she
The court accordingly holds that the Surrogate’s Court has from ancient times had jurisdiction to determine the necessary parties to a proceeding and their right to share in the estate. There has never been any right to a jury trial of the preliminary question and the respondent has no right to a trial by jury on this issue.
Insofar as the application for a jury trial is addressed to the discretion of the court, it is- denied. It is to be noted that the movant did not make demand for a jury trial in her answer. Inasmuch-as the court has determined that movant has no right to a jury trial, the question of waiver is not necessary to the determination of the motion.