43 Misc. 230 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1904
This is an application made by Carl Schwinghammer for a commission to take the testimony of various witnesses named in the application, all residents of Germany, to which the administratrix, Paulina Lutz Krueger, has filed objections. William C. Lutz, the intestate, died in Buffalo, N. Y., January 23, 1902, leaving no father, mother, widow, descendants or brother, except Paulina Lutz Krueger, his illegitimate sister, of full blood.- William C. Lutz and Paulina Lutz Krueger were children of the same father and mother who were never married. Both children were born out of wedlock, and illegitimate. William Gottlieb Lutz, their father, was bom February 24, 1815, in Germany, and died there on May 13, 1873. It appears that said William Gottlieb Lutz on September 30, 1866, was married to Eliza Frey in Germany, who died on March 6, 1895, without children. Rosina Marie S'chaaf, the mother of ¡William C. Lutz and Paulina Lutz Krueger, died intestate,
It is claimed that the father of the deceased intestate adopted him under the laws of Germany in his early boyhood days, and that by virtue of such adoption the distribution of the decedent’s estate would pass, not to his illegitimate sister of full blood with himself, but to the next of kin of his father, the latter being the grandchildren of the brother of William Gottlieb Lutz and the grandnephew and grandniece of the father of the illegitimate deceased, thereby using the father of the illegitimate as a conduit of title to pass the property on to the legitimate next of kin of such putative father.
My conclusion is to deny the application on the ground that subdivision 9 of section 2732 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is chapter 236 of the Laws of 1845, provides that the relatives of the deceased on the part of the mother shall take in the same manner as if the deceased had been legitimate, if the mother of such deceased be dead.
Assuming the adoption claimed by the applicant to have actually taken place in conformity with the laws of Germany, it nevertheless would not have legitimated William C. Lutz through such act of adoption by his putative father, William Gottlieb Lutz, and such act of adoption by the putative father would not legitimate William C. Lutz to the extent of depriving his mother, and through her, his sister of full blood, of her right to distribution under the laws of the State of New York, and thus carry the distribution over to the Schwinghammer branch, who are the
Decreed accordingly.