1 Redf. 292 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1859
Their mother died in March, 1858. One of the children is about five years of age, the other is about three years. They have no brothers or sisters, and it does not appear that their grandfather, on their father’s side, is living.
During his last illness, and just previous to his death, their father signed a writing, by making his mark in the presence of witnesses, committing these children to the care and management of the Brooklyn Industrial School Association and Home for Destitute Children, a corporation organized by an act of the Legislature, passed in 1857. This association now has the custody of the children.
Mr. Thomas Kearney, the grandfather of the children on the mother’s side, makes application to this court to_be appointed guardian of the children. The appointment of Kearney was first objected to on the ground that the Brooklyn Industrial School Association, having the custody of the children by the consent of the father given in writing, they were, under their act of incorporation, the legal guardians of the children, and that the surrogate had no jurisdiction to appoint a guardian.
This objection was overruled, on the ground that there was nothing in the said act inconsistent with the provisions of the Bevised Statutes under which application had been made for letters of guardianship, and that under the provisions of the statutes, the surrogate was bound, on application, to appoint some suitable person as guardian of the children.
Mr. Kearney was then objected to as being an unsuitable person, and James Laffin, an uncle of the children, made application to be appointed guardian.
The appointment of Mr. Laffin was also objected to as being an unsuitable person, possessing no means to provide for the children, and testimony was taken as to the character and circumstances of both applicants.
From this testimony it appears, that Mr. Kearney has a
It also appears that the children resided much with Mr. Kearney during the lifetime of their parents, and that he assisted both the mother and father in their lifetime, because the father was sickly, and that he purchased a place of burial for the wife and another child of John Laffin.
It seems, also, that Kearney, in October last, took these children to his home from the poorhouse, at which place they had been placed by their father and James Laffin, because they were unable to support them for want of work.
James Laffin, who asks to be appointed guardian of the children, is, it appears, a young man, about twenty-three years of age, a varnisher by trade, and unmarried. He resides with his sister in the upper part of a rear house, known as Ho. Ill Concord-street. His means for providing for the children appear from the testimony to be precarious, depending upon whether he gets work as a varnisher. During the last fall, the father, James, and their sister, living together, could not support the children, and for this reason placed them in the almshouse at Flatbush.
So far as regards any expressed wishes on the part of John Laffin, relative to the care and custody of the children after his decease, there appears little in the testimony which would favor the appointment of one of the applicants in preference to the other. It seems, at one time he determined to give them to their grandfather, Mr. Kearney; and afterwards said he did not want them at Mr. Kearney’s so long as he was able to take care of them. At another time he wished James and his sister to take care of them; and during his last illness, when asked by one of the ladies of the Industrial School Association, what provision he had made for his children, he said that he intended to leave them with his brother
Mr. Baffin was poor and sick. It was natural that he should be anxious for the welfare of his children. Them grandfather wanted them given to’ him. His brother and sister wanted them. He did not know what to do. One of the ladies of the Industrial School Association swears that, up to a short time before his death, “ he appeared lost as to the care of his children — what he should do with themand finally he concluded to give them to the Industrial School Association.
I cannot, of course, under the provisions of the Revised Statutes, appoint a corporation guardian of the person and property of these children; nor do I perceive any thing in the nature of the guardianship which the Industrial School Association may claim under the act by which they were incorporated, which can be inconsistent with the obligations of a guardian appointed by this court, to see that the children are properly cared for, even when in the custody of said institution.
There is no evidence before me as to the religious creed or belief of either of the persons who have petitioned for letters of guardianship. There was an offer of evidence to show that the father of the children was a Catholic, and received the sacrament of that church twice just previous to his death. But the testimony was objected to as immaterial and irrelevant to the case, and ruled out.
From the testimony in the case as to the character and circumstances of the two persons who have applied for letters, I am satisfied that Mr. Kearney is the most suitable person for guardian of these children, and that the prayer of his petition should be granted. •
First. That the decision of the surrogate, upon the surrender, was res adgudicata, and that the surrogate having pronounced the surrender invalid, the county judge was bonnd by such decision.
Second. That the surrender was conditional, and not to take effect until the death of John Baffin, and, therefore, invalid.
An appeal was taken by the respondents to the Supreme Court. The General Term, second district, reversed the proceedings and order of the county judge, and awarded a restitution of the children to the care and custody of the respondents. The opinion of the court, by Brown, J., is reported in People v. Kearney (31 Barb., 430; S. C., 19 How. Pr., 493).