State Land Board v. Kolovrat

349 P.2d 255, 220 Or. 448, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 376
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 349 P.2d 255 (State Land Board v. Kolovrat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Land Board v. Kolovrat, 349 P.2d 255, 220 Or. 448, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 376 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

We are presented with an appeal from decrees in the estates of Joe Stoich and Muharem Zekich, arising from proceedings for escheat in each estate instituted by the State Land Board, hereinafter referred to as the State.

*450 Stoich died intestate in Multnomah county on December 6, 1953, leaving as his only heirs a sister, four nephews, and three nieces, all residents of Yugoslavia.

Zekich likewise died intestate in the same county on December 17,1953, leaving as his only heirs two sisters, two brothers, two nephews, and three nieces, who are also residents of Yugoslavia.

All the heirs of each decedent are made parties defendant and appear therein by their attorneys in fact.

Because of the similarity of basic facts and questions of law common to both proceedings, the two matters were consolidated in the probate court for the purpose of trial and later consolidated in this court for the purpose of argument.

The position of the State is: that each decedent died without heirs or next of ldn entitled to receive any part of his or her relative’s estate. It premises its case upon ORS 111.070 (Oregon Laws 1951, ch 519, U).

From orders denying the State’s petitions for escheat and determining the right of the several defendants as alien heirs to take their respective distributive shares in the estates to which they lay claim, the State appeals.

This is the first appeal to reach this court from orders made pursuant to ORS 111.070, supra. Heretofore, all of the appeals in like matters had their origin in the earlier counterpart to the present statute, namely, §61-107, OCLA (Oregon Laws 1937, ch 399, § 1).

*451 OES 111.070, the controiling statute, provides:

“(1) The right of an alien not residing within the United States or its territories to take either real or personal property or the proceeds thereof in this state by succession or testamentary disposition, upon the same terms and conditions as inhabitants and citizens of the United States, is dependent in each case:
“(a) Upon the existence of a reciprocal right upon the part of citizens of the United States to take real and personal property and the proceeds thereof upon the same terms and conditions as inhabitants and citizens of the country of which such alien is an inhabitant or citizen;
“(b) Upon the rights of citizens of the United States to receive by payment to them within the United States or its territories money originating from the estates of persons dying within such foreign country; and
“(c) Upon proof that such foreign heirs, distributees, devisees or legatees may receive the benefit, use or control of money or property from estates of persons dying in this state without confiscation, in whole or in part, by the governments of such foreign countries.
“(2) The burden is upon such nonresident alien to establish the fact of existence of the reciprocal rights set forth in subsection (1) of this section.
“(3) If such reciprocal rights are not found to exist and if no heir, devisee or legatee other than such alien is found eligible to take such property, the property shall be disposed of as escheated property.”

Speaking generally, the principal differences between the present statute and the former one dealing with the rights of aliens to take inheritances in Oregon estates are: (1) the significant words “in like manner” do not appear in OES 111.070, supra, *452 thereby making the reciprocal requirements of the statute read as does its California counterpart on that subject (West, Annotated California Probate Code, 528 § 259); (2) the present act embraces inheritances in real, as well as personal, property; and (3) adds, as an additional condition to the taking, subsection (c) of Section 1, requiring proof that foreign heirs will receive their legacies without diminution by the government of the country where they claim citizenship.

The present act, as before, imposes on the alien nonresident heir the burden of proving the existence of the conditions precedent to qualifying one to take .an inheritance in this state. These concurring conditions are: (1) that a reciprocal right existed as of the date of the decedent’s death on the part of American citizens to take property from estates in the foreign country in which the alien resides, upon the same terms and conditions as the inhabitants and citizens of that foreign country; (2) that American citizens have the right to receive by payment to them within the United States moneys originating from estates in the foreign country; and (3) that the heirs and legatees in the foreign country will have the use, benefit and control of money or property originating from Oregon estates without confiscation by the foreign government. Failure to sustain the burden imposed upon alien heirs by the preponderance of evidence as to any one of these three items of proof of right results in defeating the claim of the alien to *453 take under the statute. In re Estate of Krachler, 199 Or 448, 263 P2d 769; State Land Board v. Rogers, 219 Or 233, 347 P2d 57, 59, decided December 2, 1959.

The defendant heirs claim to have met the burden in every particular.

OES 111.070 is, as was its predecessor, § 61-107, OCLA, a law of succession, which governs the rights of nonresident aliens to take and receive property in the estate of an Oregon decedent. In re Estate of Krachler, supra (199 Or at 454); In re Knutsen’s Estate, 31 Cal2d 573, 191 P2d 747, 751. The date of death controls the succession to the property and the three required rights under OES 111.070, supra, must be shown to have so existed under the law of the country of the alien claimant as of that date. In re Estate of Krachler, supra, (199 Or at 453); State Land Board v. Rogers, supra (347 P2d at 61).

The “rights” of which we speak, as employed in the current statute, have been defined to mean an unqualified right, enforceable at law. In re Estate of Krachler, supra (199 Or at 455, 457 and 502), and “definitely ascertainable” In re Arbulich’s Estate, 41 Cal2d 86, 257 P2d 433, 439. These definitions exclude the concept of a right which may in any sense be limited or dependent upon an act of discretion or grace upon the part of any governmental authority or agency.

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Related

Zschernig v. Miller
389 U.S. 429 (Supreme Court, 1968)
Zschernig v. Miller
415 P.2d 15 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1966)
State Land Board v. Pekarek
378 P.2d 735 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)
Snelar v. State
367 P.2d 563 (Montana Supreme Court, 1961)
Estate of Spehar
367 P.2d 563 (Montana Supreme Court, 1961)
Kolovrat v. Oregon
366 U.S. 187 (Supreme Court, 1961)
Mullart v. State Land Board
353 P.2d 531 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
349 P.2d 255, 220 Or. 448, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-land-board-v-kolovrat-or-1960.