Antonitis v. Mccormick

2 Pa. D. & C.3d 595, 1977 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County
DecidedMay 20, 1977
Docketno. 65 of 1976
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C.3d 595 (Antonitis v. Mccormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonitis v. Mccormick, 2 Pa. D. & C.3d 595, 1977 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

BIGELOW, J.,

In this equity action, plaintiff, a widow, by amended complaint filed August 6, 1976, requests a decree from the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County directing that the Most Reverend J. Carroll McCormick, Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton, allow disinterment of her deceased husband’s body from St. Mary’s Cemetery, Pringle, Luzerne County, Pa., that the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County direct that plaintiff be permitted to take and transport her late husband’s body from said St. Mary’s Cemetery to Denison Cemetery, Swoyersville, Luzerne County, and to have this body reinterred at Lot No. E Y2 36, grave No. 3 or 4 of said Denison Cemetery.

[596]*596Bishop McCormick, through counsel, avers that the decree plaintiff seeks is violative of the laws, rules and regulations of the Diocese of Scranton and the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and, therefore, requests the court to dismiss plaintiff’s amended complaint and to enter judgment in his favor.

Plaintiff, in her answer to defendant’s new matter, denies that the requested disinterment and reburial would violate the laws, rules and regulations of the Diocese of Scranton and the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and avers that a court-ordered disinterment would be in conformity with the laws, rules and regulations of both the Diocese of Scranton and the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

The dispute was heard in equity court on February 23, 1977, at the conclusion of which the hearing judge closed the record and requested counsel to furnish briefs in support of their client’s respective positions within two weeks. These briefs were forthcoming as requested.

The trial court is required to resolve such diverse points of view as:

“In light of the law as cited in her trial brief and in this document, and considering the fact that the Diocesan Statutes do not themselves forbid reinterments in nonsectarian cemeteries and since this Bishop of the Scranton Diocese refuses as a matter of course to allow such disinterments and in view of the fact that large numbers of Catholics are buried in the Denison Cemetery with Christian burial rights, the Plaintiff contends that she has been arbitrarily and capriciously denied approval of the reinterment of the remains of ANTHONY ANTONITIS to the Dension Cemetery.” Plain[597]*597tiff’s summary (post-trial brief), p. 8, submitted by James P. Blaum, Esquire, Attorney for Plaintiff.

and

“Plaintiff’s case fails to meet the heavy burden imposed by the decisional law cited in this brief . . . The Defendant, Bishop J. Carroll McCormick, vigorously and strennously (sic) objects to disinterment in this case. . . . The Catholic Church, through the Bishop and Father Norkunas, has offered and continues to offer a generous, reasonable and proper solution to the problem, and that is a free burial lot next to Plaintiff ’s husband in St. Mary’s Cemetery.
“A decision compelling the Bishop to permit exhumation contrary to Statute 72 vesting that power in him exclusively is fraught with constitutional objections, the most important of which is that such a decision would constitute an invasion by civil authority of the rights of the Church protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.”

Memorandum of law on behalf of defendant (post-trial), p. 12, submitted by Thomas P. Kennedy, Esquire, Attorney for Defendant.

^ ‡ i-s ‡

DISCUSSION

Whatever Mrs. Antonitis’ options for the place of his interment were at the death of her husband, she elected to seek burial of her husband in the Roman Catholic parish cemetery in which his parents were buried. The pastor of the church which owned that cemetery did not encourage plaintiff’s request, as his parish cemetery was small, and neither plaintiff nor her husband were members of his parish, but plaintiff persisted, and the pastor [598]*598acquiesced, sold plaintiff the gravesite she then desired and plaintiff ’s husband was buried in that grave. A week later, plaintiff advised this pastor that she had misrepresented her husband’s desires which, in fact, were that he and she be buried in a nonsectarian cemetery (Denison Cemetery) near their home, and she requested permission to disinter her husband’s remains from St. Mary’s Cemetery and to reinter his remains in Denison Cemetery in which she had purchased two graves subsequent to her husband’s funeral. Denied this request by the parish priest who managed the cemetery in which her husband was buried, and referred to her husband’s priest, Monsignor Polcha, who, in turn, subsequently conveyed to her the rejection by the Director of Diocesan Cemeteries, acting for the Bishop, of her request, plaintiff unsuccessfully sought the approbation of the Pope, and finally, instituted this action in equity to compel the Bishop to permit the disinterment of her husband’s remains and the reinterment thereof in Denison Cemetery.

In this litigation, the issue is not the right of the widow to control the original interment of her deceased husband’s remains but is whether, under the facts of this case, she has an enforceable right to require the Bishop to accede to her demand for disinterment from a Catholic cemetery for reinterment in a nonsectarian cemetery.

In an equity action in many ways similar to this dispute, the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County refused a request that defendant Catholic Cemeteries Association be restrained from preventing the removal of the remains of a deceased wife by her surviving husband from a Catholic Diocesan Cemetery of the Diocese of Pittsburgh [599]*599and reburial in a nonsectarian cemetery, the hearing judge determining that the decision of the Bishop of Pittsburgh refusing plaintiff’s request for disinterment from consecrated or solemnly blessed ground in the Diocesan Cemetery for reinterment in the nonsectarian cemetery in ground which would not be blessed was valid and binding and, therefore, dismissed the complaint in equity: Intorre et al. v. The Catholic Cemeteries Assn, of the Diocese of Pittsburgh, 112 Pitts.L.J. 510 (1963). In that equity action, the hearing judge found as fact that there was no evidence to support the husband’s claim that his wife made any statements that she wanted to be buried in the nonsectarian cemetery after the designation of the Diocesan Cemetery for the district in which they lived. In the present case, plaintiff claimed and testified that her husband wanted both himself and plaintiff to be buried in the nonsectarian cemetery, and this testimony was corroborated by Mrs. Nell Molesky, a friend of plaintiff. In Intorre, supra, plaintiff was convinced by the undertaker to bury his deceased wife in the Catholic cemetery; in the present case, no one influenced plaintiff to bury her deceased husband in St. Mary’s cemetery; in fact, it is clear that Father Norkunas was reluctant to permit the burial as the deceased was not a member of his parish, and he also questioned plaintiff as to her plans for her eventual interment and was advised by plaintiff that she would be buried with her parents in a cemetery in Swoyersville. At that point, plaintiff had represented to Father Norkunas that her deceased husband should be buried with his parents in St. Mary’s Cemetery and she would be buried with her parents in another cemetery. The following week [600]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C.3d 595, 1977 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonitis-v-mccormick-pactcomplluzern-1977.