250 A.D. 31 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1937
Joseph Fox and Helen G. Fox were married in 1891, and lived together as husband and wife until February 3, 1915, when the wife was committed to the Kings Park State Hospital. During her marriage the wife had accumulated a fund of some $2,300, on deposit in the Dime Savings Bank of Williamsburgh, which she had saved from moneys given to her by her husband.
Upon the commitment of his wife to the State hospital, Fox was requested to pay ten dollars per month for her care and maintenance. He made these payments out of his own funds for a short time, but by May, 1917, had become about eighteen months in arrears. A proceeding was thereupon instituted by the Attorney-General for the appointment of a committee of the incompetent’s estate, and on June 26, 1917, an order was made appointing the husband, Joseph Fox, as committee upon the filing of a $7,000 bond. The bond was filed and a commission issued on August 3, 1917. The order appointing the committee directed that out of the funds of the incompetent coming into his hands, the committee should pay “ such sums of money as may be now due and may hereafter become due for the support and maintenance of such incompetent person.”
Thereafter the payments necessary for the incompetent’s support were made by the committee entirely out of her estate. The principal expenditures were for board and maintenance at the State hospital, clothing, premiums on the committee’s bond, and rental of a safe deposit box. Up to the end of the year 1930, the total expenditures made out of the estate were $3,336.14. During the same interval, the incompetent received additional moneys totalling $3,325.90.
Joseph Fox died on February 10, 1931. The petitioner was appointed executor of his estate, and in April, 1933, he applied for a judicial settlement of the account of the deceased as committee. A special guardian was appointed and filed a report recommending that proof be taken on the question of the husband’s ability to support his wife during the period of her incompetency.. An order was made referring the matter to an official referee to take proof on that question. The hearings proceeded before the official referee and another referee subsequently substituted. During the hearings, Edith M. Hall was appointed substituted committee of the estate of the incompetent and filed formal objections to the account.
The referee found that Joseph Fox had had sufficient means during his lifetime to provide bis wife with necessaries, and recommended that his estate be surcharged to the extent of the payments made out of the incompetent’s estate for hospital care and maintenance and clothing. The referee declined to pass on the question whether the incompetent’s estate was entitled to dower in two
A question arises at the outset concerning the duty of a husband to support his incompetent wife. The proper rule seems to be that the husband is liable for the support of his incompetent wife, if he is financially able, unless it would be inequitable to compel him to furnish support. Section 80 of the' Mental Hygiene Law provides: “ The father, mother, husband, wife and children of an insane person, if of sufficient ability, and the committee or guardian of his person and estate, if his estate is sufficient for the purpose, shall cause him to be properly and suitably cared for and maintained.”
The husband’s ability to furnish support is thus made a condition to the obligation. At the same time it was held in Empire Trust Co. v. Fell (271 N. Y. 72) that, in an action at law brought by the committee of an incompetent wife against the husband to recover for necessaries furnished to the incompetent, an equitable defense alleging that the wife possessed a separate estate, that the husband’s resources had been greatly reduced, and that if the incompetent were of sound mind she would not have sought support from her husband, was legally sufficient. It seems to be the rule, therefore, that the husband will not be charged for his incompetent wife’s support where such a requirement would be inequitable.
A careful examination of the record convinces us that the referee correctly decided the main issue of fact in the case. Granting all that is said by the appellant surety company about the age and condition of health of the deceased during the latter years of his life, his inability to work, and his indigent condition at the time of his death, it is nevertheless the fact that during this period he came into possession of three sums of money aggregating more than $12,000. Out of these funds he could have provided the very modest amounts required for the maintenance of his wife, which totalled only about $200 per year, and under the circumstances it is not inequitable to hold that he should have done so.
The appellant surety company argues, however, that the provisions of the order made in 1917, appointing the committee and directing that the committee pay for the support and maintenance of the incompetent out of her estate, conclusively established the liability of the committee and relieved the husband of any obligation
A similar situation was passed on by this court in Matter of Marsh (242 App. Div. 290). There an order had been made denying the application of a husband to be relieved of bis obligation to support his incompetent wife, and declaring further that the committee was under no duty to pay for the support of the incompetent at a State hospital. We held that the order thus made did not bar a subsequent order directing the committee to pay the State hospital for past maintenance. The conclusion follows that an order directing payment for the wife’s maintenance by one of the two persons possibly liable does not operate to exempt the other from ultimate responsibility.
The appellants advance the further argument that, whatever may be the extent of the husband’s obligation, he can be held liable for the support of his incompetent wife only if an order to that effect has previously been made; and that, even in that event, he is liable only for expenses incurred after the making of the order. This contention is based principally upon Long Island State Hospital v. Stuart (22 Misc. 48) and Matter of Willis (94 id. 29). In the first of these cases the court expressed the opinion that “ before any relative can be legally charged with liability for the board of the patient in the State institution, an order must be made establishing the remissness of such relative, and directing the confinement of the patient at his charge and expense.”
A similar opinion was expressed in the Willis case. Both, of these cases were concerned with the liability of a parent for the support of an adult incompetent child. The liability was purely statutory. Here, the liability for support existed at common law. Certainly, if the wife had remained competent, no order would have been necessary to charge the husband for her maintenance, and it would seem anomalous if the fact of her incompetence operated to relieve the husband of bis obligation until the court had taken affirmative action.
In Matter of Cornell (240 App. Div. 996) this court had an appeal from an order giving instructions to a committee which provided in part that the committee should pay the State for the support
That decision appears to mean that, in an appropriate action or proceeding, the husband may, if the facts warrant it, be held liable for his incompetent wife’s support without regard to a previous order fixing such liability. The same conclusion can be drawn from Matter of Marsh (supra). In the more recent case of Matter of Moore (245 App. Div. 762) this court affirmed an order surcharging the committee of an incompetent, who was also her husband, for sums paid out of her estate for maintenance at a State hospital. It does not appear that any previous order had been made establishing the husband’s liability.
Our conclusion on this question is that the husband’s liability to the committee for Ms wife’s support may be established in any proceedmg or action m which both parties are before the court and the issue is fairly raised, and that no previous order of the court is necessary to set the liability in motion. We can find nothing m sections 80 or 82 of the Mental Hygiene Law requiring such an order. In a case like the present one, where the husband is also the committee, it is hardly possible that such an order would ever be obtamed. The husband would, m Ms own interest, make payment out of Ms wife’s funds. The State, having received payment, would have no incentive to proceed agamst any one. The husband, as committee, would not proceed agamst himself as an mdividual, and he would thus escape his obligation altogether, at least until his first accountmg. We should not sanction a rule leading to that result.
There is no merit in the contention of the appellant surety company that error was committed in the admission of the testimony given by the witness Edith Hall, a sister of the mcompetent.
The special guardian’s cross-appeal is based on the claim that the incompetent is entitled to dower in the Hamilton Beach and
The only remaining question concerns the fees of the special guardian and counsel to the accounting executor. The referee recommended that counsel to the executor should receive no allowance for his services. The court allowed him seventy-five dollars and disbursements, payable out of the incompetent’s estate. In our opinion, no such allowance should have been made. No one raises this point, and in fact the executor claims that the allowance to his counsel was inadequate. We think, nevertheless, that the incompetent should not be compelled to pay for legal services rendered in defending the improper action of her committee, and that the order should in this respect be modified.
The special guardian was allowed $200 and complains that this allowance was inadequate. The amount surcharged against the executor of the deceased committee was recovered largely through the efforts of the special guardian. His report precipitated the proceedings which resulted in the recovery of $2,910.56 for the incompetent. The successor committee was not appointed until after the hearings before the referee had been half completed. Up to that time, the special guardian had borne the main burden of the proceeding, and even thereafter he took an important part in the hearings. He is the only person who has filed a brief in opposition to the executor and surety company on this appeal. There is no doubt that he expended considerable time and labor in the incompetent’s behalf and accomplished a beneficial result. His allowance should be increased to $400.
The referee also recommended that the estate of the deceased committee should not be allowed commissions. The court allowed commissions at the statutory rate. We find the allowance proper under the circumstances. The committee’s conduct was not flagrantly wrongful. Fox may have been misled by the provisions of the order of appointment, in which he was directed to make payment out of the incompetent’s funds.
The final order should be modified so as to provide that the allowance of a fee and disbursements to the attorney for the petitioner be struck out and that the allowance to the special guardian be increased to $400, and as so modified affirmed, without costs.
Final order settling -the account of the deceased committee of an incompetent person modified so as to provide that the allowance of a fee and disbursements to the attorney for the petitioner be struck out and that the allowance to the special guardian be increased to $400. As so modified, the order is unanimously affirmed, without costs.