Stastny v. Tachovsky

132 N.W.2d 317, 178 Neb. 109, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 64
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1964
Docket35760
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 132 N.W.2d 317 (Stastny v. Tachovsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stastny v. Tachovsky, 132 N.W.2d 317, 178 Neb. 109, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 64 (Neb. 1964).

Opinion

Brower, J.

This action was an equitable one in the nature of a bill of discovery brought by Lillian Stastny as plaintiff against William Tachovsky, Bessie Chab, and Elsie Kovar, individually, and Frank M. Chab.and Milo S. *111 Stastny as special administrators of the Estate of .Alfred Tachovsky, deceased, defendants, in the district court for Saline County. The plaintiff is the sole heir-at-law of Ida D. Tachovsky, deceased, and the defendants are all the heirs as well as the personal representatives of the Estate of Alfred Tachovsky, deceased.

Plaintiff’s petition sought the judgment and order of the court directing the bodies of Alfred Tachovsky and Ida D. Tachovsky be exhumed and an autopsy be performed by at least two pathologists appointed by the court and directed to report in writing to it with reference to their findings. The petition makes clear its purpose was to determine from an examination of the decedents’ wounds which died first in order to show in which estate the property owned by them should descend.

At the conclusion of the trial, the district court found that there was probable cause that by disinterment of the bodies and autopsies, certain facts relevant to the issues may be revealed and that justice demands said disinterment and autopsies. The judgment ordered that three acting and qualified pathologists be appointed, one by each party and a third by the court. It named and nominated a chairman of the board of pathologists who should designate the place of the autopsies. The court gave directions as to the disinterment, care, and reburial of the bodies, and required joint or several reports to be filed. It directed the plaintiff to file a bond in the sum of $1,000 conditioned that all costs of the disinterment, autopsies, and reburial be paid if finally adjudged against the plaintiff.

A motion for new trial having been overruled, the heirs-at-law of Alfred Tachovsky, hereinafter called the defendants, bring the matter to this court on appeal.

The errors assigned by the defendants as far as they are pertinent will be stated hereafter as they are discussed.

The decedents, Alfred Tachovsky and Ida D. Tachov *112 sky, were married in the 1920’s and then moved onto a farm located 1 mile east and a half mile south of Swan-ton, Nebraska, where they resided the rest of their lives. No descendants or parents survived them and their only heirs-at-law are the parties as set out. From outward appearances at least, they had always lived together in harmony. They had prospered and it is stipulated that the value of their estates amounted to $200,000 or more. Both of them had an 80-acre farm in their own name. They both were in measurably good health although both had to some degree high blood pressure which each had been able to control.

The decedents’ farmstead was: located on the west side of a north-south public road about 100 feet therefrom. The front of the house faced the east and the back porch was to the west. There was a fence west of the house with a gate separating the yard about the home from that around the other buildings. A cement walk about 2 feet wide led from the house to a gate in the fence, a distance of about 20 feet. The driveway from the public road to the homestead was a short distance south of the house.

About half a block south of the driveway into the decedents’ farmstead is a private lane extending east and west and opening onto the public road. On this lane about a quarter of a mile west is the farmstead of Stanley Jiskra who had rented the farmland of the decedents as Alfred Tachovsky had ceased operating it personally.

The day of the tragedy, May 3, 1962, was a nice sunny day with the temperature about 55 or 60 degrees. About 7:15 or 7:20 a.m., Jiskra started to drive his tractor down the lane on his way to work because Alfred Tachovsky had requested that he discontinue using a gate between farms and come by the road. Turning into the driveway at the Alfred Tachovsky farmstead he proceeded west thereon. As he reached a point south of the house he observed Alfred Tachovsky lying on the side *113 walk mentioned not far from the gate. Beside him was a .16 gauge Winchester pump gun and an empty cartridge. Another empty shell and a loaded one were later found in the gun’s chamber. The body laid in a diagonal direction across the cement sidewalk. His feet were about 18 inches from a large catalpa tree south of the walk and his head was on or across the walk to the northeast. A hammer was lying near the tree and later a nail partially driven in the tree was found protruding from it.

Jiskra jumped off the tractor, “grabbed” Alfred Tachovsky by the arm, and saw he was dead. His arm was warm. The body was dressed in a short-sleeved shirt, bibbed overalls, and stockings but no shoes. Jiskra went at once to the house, opened the screen door, and “hollered” in a loud voice three times. There was no answer. Neither the homes of Alfred Tachovsky or Jiskra had telephones so he rode the tractor back to his farm and got his car. He then went to Swanton to get help to ascertain the cause of death and the whereabouts of Ida D. Tachovsky. There he called the sheriff at Wilber who was out but communicated with his wife. He also phoned Mito Stastny, the husband of the plaintiff. He stopped at the elevator for help but it was not open. Driving back he went to the home of Lester Tachovsky, a nephew but not an heir of Alfred Tachovsky, who lived about a quarter of a mile south across the road from the latter’s farm. Lester had gone about 30 minutes before to assist another farmer but his wife, Jean Tachovsky, was there and she rode back with him to the scene of the tragedy. No one else had come meantime. Jean Tachovsky, after viewing the body of Alfred Tachovsky, went into the house and upstairs into the west bedroom where she was the first to discover the body of Ida D. Tachovsky. On coming down, Jiskra testified she exclaimed, “ ‘My God, everything is covered just with blood.’ ” When he asked her, “ ‘Is she *114 living?’ ” she answered that, “ ‘She looks like dead to me.’ ”

Milo and Lillian Stastny were next to appear on the scene. They stayed but a short time. Lillian was upset and at the invitation of Jiskra, Milo drove her to Jiskra’s home. Milo returned at once. Both of them were back at different times during the day but do not appear to have examined the wounds of the decedents.

The undertaker, Glenn Zajicek, was notified by the sheriff’s wife that a body had been found. He picked up his assistant, Frank Bartos, and Robert Shestak, deputy sheriff of Saline County, and all proceeded to the farm in an ambulance. They found the body of Alfred Tachovsky lying as described. Being informed that Ida D. Tachovsky was lying dead upstairs, about 15 minutes later they went upstairs and viewed her body where it lay in the west bedroom. In this room there were two windows to the west with a door between opening on an upstairs veranda. The deceased, dressed in her nightclothes, was lying on her stomach on the bed, the head of which was against the north wall. The undertaker testified she was then dead. Her head was on the pillow. There was blood in her hair, about her head, on the pillow, and some on the wall.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W.2d 317, 178 Neb. 109, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stastny-v-tachovsky-neb-1964.