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Page 593
217 N.Y.S.2d 593
10 N.Y.2d 94, 176 N.E.2d 395
In the Matter of the ESTATE of
Elizabeth SZABO, Deceased,
Wolfgang S. Szabo, Appellant; Honey Wiesel,
as
Executrix of Elizabeth Szabo, Deceased,
et al., Respondents.
Court of Appeals of New York.
July 7, 1961.
Page 594
[10 N.Y.2d 95] Hyman Roffe, New
York City, for appellant.
Abraham J. Hirschsprung, New York
City, for Honey Wiesel, executor,
respondent.
[10 N.Y.2d 96] Joseph Aranow,
Brooklyn, for Robert Ullman and others,
respondents.
John E. Quinn, New York City,
special guardian for infants, respondents.
[10 N.Y.2d 97] FOSTER, Judge.
This proceeding was brought under
section 206-a of the Surrogate's Court Act
to compel the respondent executrix to
deliver to petitioner, who is the appellant
here, a certificate for 366 shares of stock
of the American Telephone & Telegraph
Company, claimed to have been the subject of
a gift inter vivos. The Surrogate's Court of
Bronx County dismissed the petition and the
Appellate Division, First Department,
unanimously affirmed without opinion the
order of the Surrogate's Court. The appeal
is here by permission.
Decedent died testate on May 26,
1959, in the City of New York, leaving a
son, who is the petitioner here, resident in
the State of Israel, and a daughter, a
resident of New York. She also left seven
grandchildren,[176 N.E.2d 396] three of them
being children of petitioner, and the
remaining four, children of her daughter.
Under her will decedent bequeathed her
residuary estate in trust for her
grandchildren.
Prior to April 24, 1959 decedent
was the sole owner of 122 shares of the
common stock of the telephone company. On
April 10, 1959 the shares of the company
were split 3 for 1, effective as of April
24, 1959, and after that date each old
certificate represented one third of its
former value and one third of its former
equity interest in the corporation.
Certificates representing the remaining
two-thirds interest were to be prepared and
forwarded by the company on May 29, 1959,
which was three days after decedent died.
Prior to April 27, 1959, decedent
received a communication from the company
advising her of the stock split, and on that
date she executed an assignment to
petitioner and herself as joint tenants on
the back of one of the four certificates
representing 50 of her 122 shares. She
directed a niece, her executrix herein, to
have the company put petitioner's name on
all of [10 N.Y.2d 98] her stock, presumably
as a joint tenant with the right of
survivorship, although there is some
question as to whether she intended an
absolute gift. However, she also directed
that the transfer of the stock was to be
held up until the new certificate was
available. When the date arrived she was
dead and the transfer of the stock to a
joint tenancy on the company's books was not
made until after her death.
Page 595
The question presented is whether
decedent made a valid inter vivos gift to
petitioner, as to any or all of the stock,
so that he is entitled to the right of
ownership as a surviving joint tenant. After
a trial the Surrogate dismissed the petition
on the ground that the certificate of stock
was not issued until after the death of the
testatrix, and, therefore, petitioner's
claim of ownership as to any or all of the
stock as a surviving life tenant was without
merit.
The requisites for a valid gift
inter vivos are simple: there must be an
intent on the part of a donor to give; there
must be a delivery of the property given
pursuant to such intent; and there must be
acceptance on the part of the donee (Matter
of Van Alstyne, 207 N.Y. 298, 306, 100 N.E.
802, 804). The delivery required must be
such as to vest the donee with control and
dominion over the property but this
requirement must be tailored to suit the
circumstances of the case. This court has
said: 'The delivery necessary to consummate
a gift must be as perfect as the nature of
the property and the circumstances and
surroundings of the parties will reasonably
permit; there must be a change of dominion
and ownership; intention or mere words
cannot supply the place of an actual
surrender of control and authority over the
thing intended to be given.'
Vincent v. Rix, 248 N.Y. 76, 83, 161 N.E.
425, 427. We would say that, where a
transfer of a part interest in stock
certificates is concerned, a symbolical
delivery would be sufficient for it is the
only kind of delivery that would be
practicable under the circumstances where
undoubtedly the donor would want to retain
possession of the certificate. Nevertheless,
even this sort of delivery must proceed to a
point of no return, and this point can only
be reached when there is a transfer of
record on the stock books of the company.
Obviously the donor does not surrender
dominion and control of a part interest
until the transfer of record is made because
up until that time he may change his mind
and withdraw his directive to the transfer
agent. [10 N.Y.2d 99] In the case at bar the
transfer of record was not made in
decedent's lifetime and hence a valid gift
inter vivos was not completed as to any
interest in the stock in question, even as
to the certificate for 50 shares which the
decedent first indorsed. This indorsement
was evidence of her intent but it was not
sufficient to complete a symbolic delivery.
The transfer agent was her agent for the
purpose of delivery and subject to her [176
N.E.2d 397] direction until the transfer was
completed on the books of the company. She
had the power to revoke the agency up until
the time the transfer, or symbolical
delivery, was actually made (Vincent v. Rix,
supra, 248 N.Y. at page 83, 161 N.E. at page
427). Her death automatically revoked the
agency.
The order should be affirmed,
without costs.
DESMOND, C. J., and DYE, FULD,
FROESSEL, VAN VOORHIS and BURKE, JJ.,
concur.
Order affirmed.
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