Belemecich Estate

192 A.2d 740, 411 Pa. 506, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 2, 1963
DocketAppeal, 84
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 192 A.2d 740 (Belemecich Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belemecich Estate, 192 A.2d 740, 411 Pa. 506, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 534 (Pa. 1963).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

Anton Belemecich, a resident of Delaware County, died intestate on October 13,1958, leaving some $70,000. His estate was administered in the orphans’ court of that county, which determined the heirs at law to be a sister, a nephew and three nieces living in Yugoslavia. The auditing judge ordered the funds in the hands of the fiduciary to be paid to the Department of Revenue of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania without escheat, in compliance with the Act of July 28, 1953, P. L. 674, §2, 20 P.S. §1156, which provides: “Whenever it shall appear to the court that if distribution were made a beneficiary would not have the actual benefit, use, enjoyment or control of the money or other property distributed to him by a fiduciary, the court shall have the [508]*508power and authority to direct the fiduciary (a) to make payment of the share of such beneficiary at such times and in such manner and amounts as the court may deem proper, or (b) to withhold distribution of the share of such beneficiary, convert it to cash, and pay it through the Department of Revenue into the State Treasury without escheat.”

This Act carries the sobriquet of “Iron Curtain Act” because its purpose is to protect the moneys, physically in America, but belonging to people who fatefully find themselves behind the Iron Curtain of Communism. It is a commendable and salutary piece of legislation because it provides for the safekeeping of these funds even with accruing interest, in the steel-bound vaults of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania until such time as the Iron Curtain lifts or sufficiently cracks to allow honest money to pass through and be honestly delivered to the persons entitled to them. Otherwise, wages and other monetary rewards faithfully earned under a free enterprise democratic system could be used by Communist forces which are committed to the very destruction of that free enterprising world of democracy.

The Consul General of Yugoslavia, Drago Novak, who appeared at the hearing before the orphans’ court as an attorney-in-fact for the named heirs of Anton Belemecich, excepted to the findings of the court. His exceptions were dismissed and the court then amended its adjudication to allow $500 to be paid to each of the heirs through the attorney for the Yugoslavian consul who was charged “with the responsibility of securing receipts in writing, containing completely-itemized statements of any and all expenses, charges and deductions, if any, which may have been made, and the exact amounts actually received by the distributees respectively, shall be submitted to the Court for inspection immediately upon delivery to the distributees.”

[509]*509The court ordered further that the distributees be permitted to make requests of the court for additional payments at appropriate times. The Yugoslavian consul appealed, contending that the orphans’ court erred in concluding that the heirs of Anton Belemecich would not have the actual benefit, use, enjoyment and control of the money due them from the estate in question.

In its adjudication the court said: “There can be no doubt that Yugoslavia is a self-proclaimed Communist state. The fact that there may be at the moment some ideological differences between the U.S.S.R. and Yugoslavia does not change the totalitarian complexion of the present regime in Yugoslavia nor does that government’s philosophical, economic and political concepts of the right of a state to confiscate private property without just compensation to the rightful owners inspire this court with any confidence that an award to residents of Yugoslavia would meet the objectives of the public policy of the Commonwealth as enunciated by the legislature in the so-called ‘Iron Curtain Act.’ ”_ The appellant, in one of his exceptions in the court below, maintained that “there is no legally competent evidence before the Court from which it can be found or concluded that Yugoslavia is an ‘Iron Curtain’ Country.”

To argue that Yugoslavia is not behind the Iron Curtain is to argue that it is not on the eastern side of the Atlantic Ocean. There are certain well-known, indisputable geographical and historical facts which require no substantive proof in Court, and one of those irrefutable, if unfortunate, realities, is that Yugoslavia, as the court below found, is a satellite state where the residents have no individualistic control over their destiny, fate or pocketbooks, and where their politico-economic horizon is raised or lowered according to the will, wish or whim of a self-made dictator. .J

President Judge Roberts of the Orphans’ Court of Erie County, now Justice Roberts, said in the case of [510]*510Dopierala, Estate, 7 Fiduc. Rep. 262, 263: “It is notorious and regrettable that the unfortunate people of Poland and other residents enslaved behind ‘Iron Curtain’ dictatorship are denied basic human and property rights. Common knowledge and experience indicate that funds transmitted to residents, subject to police state absolutism, rarely reach the intended individual. More frequently the funds are wholly or partially confiscated by unfair rates of exchange or by other direct or indirect police state pressures or devices exerted against the intended recipient or his family, either by the government itself or by its unscrupulous officials or functionaries. Of these deplorable facts we take judicial notice, and upon careful consideration of all the attending circumstances, as they now appear, we find that if distribution to this beneficiary were made, she would not have ‘the actual benefit, use, enjoyment or control’ of her inheritance.”

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Belemecich Estate
192 A.2d 740 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
192 A.2d 740, 411 Pa. 506, 1963 Pa. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belemecich-estate-pa-1963.