Dahood v. Frankovich

746 P.2d 115, 229 Mont. 287, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 1071
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1987
Docket87-041
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 746 P.2d 115 (Dahood v. Frankovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dahood v. Frankovich, 746 P.2d 115, 229 Mont. 287, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 1071 (Mo. 1987).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment entered by the District Court, Third Judicial District, County of Deer Lodge, holding that Mary Cepuran, Joza Vinski and Karl Vinski, were entitled to equal one-third shares of the intestate residue of the estate of Rose M. McEwan, per capita and not by right of representation. We affirm.

Rose M. McEwan died on May 9, 1984. At the time of her death she left a valid will in which, after certain bequests, she left the entire residuary estate to her half brother, Joseph Stokan. The residuary legatee, Joseph Stokan, predeceased Rose M. McEwan, and Joseph left no issue who could take the share of a deceased devisee *289 under Section 72-2-512, MCA. Accordingly, because the residuary estate of the decedent Rose M. McEwan is not effectively disposed of by her will, the residuary estate passes under the laws of intestate succession. Section 72-2-201, MCA.

Rose M. McEwan herself left no surviving issue, parent, brother, sister, children nor grandchildren of a deceased brother or sister. There are 30 claimants to her residuary estate whose relationships to the decedent Rose M. McEwan we take from an agreed statement of facts to be as follows:

A

Third degree:

Karl Vinski and Joza Vinski, half-brothers, and Mary Cepuran, half-sister to Kata Vinski Stokan, deceased. Rose M. McEwan is the daughter of Kata Vinski Stokan, deceased.

B

Fourth degree:

Ana Prpic (represented in this matter by Mary Ann Johnson) daughter of Rose Vinski, deceased. Rose Vinski was the full sister of Kata Vinski Stokan, the mother of Rose M. McEwan, deceased.

C

Ann Angela Laslovich Holleran, Mary Ann Laslovich Puccinelli, and Joseph Matthew Laslovich are the daughters and son of Michael Laslovich, deceased. Michael Laslovich was the full brother of Frank Laslovich, deceased, who was the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

D

Helen V. Palakovich, Angela A. Davis, and Anna M. Thompson are daughters of Frank Laslovich, deceased. This Frank Laslovich was the half-brother of Frank Laslovich, deceased, who was the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

*290 E

Fifth degree:

Raymond Hess, Robert Hess, George Hess, Marian Greene and Betty Wyant are the sons and daughters of Mary Hess, deceased. Mary Hess was the daughter of Frank Laslovich, deceased. This Frank Laslovich was a half-brother of Frank Laslovich, deceased, who was the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

F

Mary Ann Frankovich, Helen Frankovich Dasovich, Rose Frankovich Schlosser, and Steve Frankovich are the daughters and son of Helen Laslovich Frankovich, deceased. Helen Laslovich Frankovich was the daughter of Blazina Laslovich, deceased. Blazina Laslovich was the half-brother of Frank Laslovich, deceased, the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

G

Sixth degree:

Margaret Zueco Snow is a daughter to Margaret Frankovich Zueco, deceased, who was the daughter of Helen Laslovich Frankovich, deceased. Helen Laslovich Frankovich was the daughter of Blazina Laslovich, deceased. Blazina Laslovich was the half-brother of Frank Laslovich, deceased, who was the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

H

Mary Ann Frankovich Riley, Joann Frankovich Sirginson, Charlotte Frankovich Cutler, Ruth Frankovich Mix, Nancy Frankovich Connors, Kathleen Frankovich Parks, Jane Frankovich Hawthorne, Patricia Frankovich Morrison, John Frankovich and Gary Frankovich are the daughters and sons of Mike Frankovich, deceased. Mike Frankovich was the son of Helen Laslovich Frankovich, deceased. Helen Laslovich Frankovich was the daughter of Blazina Laslovich, deceased. Blazina Laslovich was a half-brother *291 of Frank Laslovich, deceased, who was the father of Rose M. McEwan, decedent.

I

Application of the half blood statute

Ana Prpic is a full first cousin of the decedent Rose M. McEwan, since Ana’s mother Rose Vinski was a full sister of Kata Vinski Stokan, the mother of Rose M. McEwan. Ana Prpic contends, therefore, that as a full first cousin, she is a half-blood relative of the decedent Rose M. McEwan, and that Karlo Vinski, Joza Vinzki, and Mary Cepuran, as half uncles and half aunt to the decedent can only be quarter blood relatives. Thus Ana contends that although the relationship of the half uncles and half aunt is that of third degree, and that of a first cousin is fourth degree, nonetheless the half blood statute should not apply to the half uncles and half aunt since they are not of the half blood. Ana Prpic makes this contention to avoid the application Section 72-2-211, MCA, which provides:

“Kindred of half blood. Relatives of the half blood inherit the same share they would inherit if they were of the whole blood.”

Ana Prpic is joined in this contention by Angela Laslovich Holleran, Mary Ann Laslovich Puccinelli and Joseph Matthew Laslovich, who state they too are full first cousins of the deceased Rose M. McEwan. Their father, Mike Laslovich was a full brother of Frank Laslovich, the father of Rose M. McEwan.

Ana Prpic contends that the term “half blood” describes the relationship between children who have one common parent. Genschorck v. Blumer (1932), 136 Kan. 228, 14 P.2d 722, 725. She argues that to be half-blood kindred requires establishing a blood line relationship to the decedent produced by either one of the decedent’s parents or through the decedent’s grandparents. This results in her statement that the 26 claimants who are not full first cousins are only “quarter blood” relatives because they trace a bloodline to Rose M. McEwan through one set of her great grandparents. It is thus that Ana Prpic asks us to interpret Section 72-2-211, MCA, in its reference to “the half blood.”

Ana Prpic’s argument is founded principally on the Official Comments to the Uniform Probate Code. In the Official Comments to Part 2, Intestate Succession, it is stated:

“(2) Inheritance by collateral relatives is limited to grandparents *292 and those descended from grandparents. This simplifies proof of heirship and eliminates will contests by remote relatives.”

Official Comments to Part 2, Montana Code Annotated, Volume 6, Title 72, page 18 (1986).

Again, in the Official Comments to Section 72-2-203, MCA, it is stated that “in line with modern policy, [it] eliminates more remote relatives tracing through great grandparents.” Montana Code Annotated, Part 2, Section 72-2-203, Volume 6, Title 72, page 20 (1986).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
746 P.2d 115, 229 Mont. 287, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahood-v-frankovich-mont-1987.