Tracz v. Blasic

39 Pa. D. & C.2d 573, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 8
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedDecember 9, 1963
Docketno. 11
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Pa. D. & C.2d 573 (Tracz v. Blasic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tracz v. Blasic, 39 Pa. D. & C.2d 573, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 8 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Shettig, J.,

This action is before the court on an amended complaint of Pauline Tracz, plaintiff, wherein she asked for certain equitable relief against defendants John Blasic and The Most Reverend J. Carroll McCormick, Bishop of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Trustee for Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church. The amended complaint alleges that in the year 1943, Anthony J. Tracz and Pauline Tracz purchased a plot in the cemetery owned by defendant bishop as trustee, located in East Taylor Township, Cambria County, Pa., which said plot consisted of eight burial places; that defendant John Blasic is the owner of four burial lots in the same cemetery adjacent to plaintiffs’ lots; that on February 20, 1963, Anthony J. Tracz, the husband of Pauline Tracz, plaintiff, died and was buried in the cemetery on a lot owned by the Tracz family, which lot already contained the bodies of three Tracz children, and on which there was not sufficient room to inter the body of Anthony J. Tracz; that after the burial of Anthony J. Tracz, Pauline Tracz learned that defendant John Blasic claimed four lots in which she claimed ownership, and that the parents of defendant John Blasic were buried in two of these lots, the other two being vacant. The complaint prayed for a mandatory injunction ordering and directing the defendant John Blasic and/or defendant, The Most Reverend J. Carroll McCormick, Bishop of the Diocese of Altoona-Johns[575]*575town, Trustee for Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church, to remove the bodies of those members of the Blasic family which were improperly interred on burial lots owned by plaintiff; and, further, to issue an injunction enjoining the same defendants from interfering with the right of sepulture of plaintiff and her family in the lots purchased by plaintiff, as well as such other relief as might be appropriate.

An answer was filed to the amended complaint on behalf of defendant, The Most Reverend J. Carroll McCormick, Bishop of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Trustee for Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church, in which it was denied that plaintiff purchased her lot in 1943, and alleging to the contrary that this purchase was on January 6, 1945, with the final payment being made on March 4, 1963. Also, in the answer is raised the suggestion that the lots be divided in half so that plaintiff would have the remaining one half of the lot and the other one half would belong to the Blasic family, and in this manner, the removal of any bodies would not be required. After hearing, this matter is for decision.

In the beginning of the hearing, defendant John Blasic raised the question of jurisdiction of this court to determine the question of the burial of persons in the church cemetery, alleging that the burial of such persons in a church cemetery is within the rules and regulations and exclusive jurisdiction of the governing body of the church, and the courts cannot interfere with this exclusive jurisdiction. In support of this contention, defendant points to the case of Brnilovich v. St. George Independent Serbian Orthodox Church of Pittsburgh, 326 Pa. 218 (1937). In that case, plaintiff brought an action in mandamus compelling it to permit the burial of his daughter, five years of age, in the cemetery owned and operated by the church. The church had, prior thereto, refused his application to purchase burial [576]*576space and permission to bury his child. The lower court, in granting the writ, ordered the church to sell a burial space to petitioner upon the payment of the usual fee. Thereafter, the church appealed to the Supreme Court. This case turned on the point of whether or not a person who is not a member of the church could compel burial in the church cemetery of a member of his family. The Supreme Court said that it could not, and that the church organization had the power to limit the privilege of burial to its own members and to exclude all others. This case, then, pertained more to the proposition of purchase of a lot in the cemetery than to burial in wrong lots. Since we do not believe that this case controls the question of jurisdiction, and from other decisions that we have reviewed, where it is apparent that many cases involving the burial in church cemeteries have been reviewed by the courts, we do not see any merit to this exception. The decision in the Brnilovich case is consistent with the Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 328, sec. 7, as amended, 10 PS §81, which provides that any real or personal property owned by any religious organization or society shall be taken and held subject to the control and disposition of such officers and authorities of such church who have the controlling power according to its rules, regulations and usages.

As part of the record, there was introduced a drawing prepared by Reverend Father Kurdziel, the present pastor of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church, showing a portion of the cemetery in question. This drawing shows at the top left the lot belonging to Stanislawczyk, and on the top right, a lot belonging to Michael Biss; immediately below the Stanislawczyk lot is a lot belonging to Tony Tracz, and below the Biss lot is shown another lot belonging to Tony Tracz; then below this second Tracz lot is a lot shown belonging to J. Blasczak. It developed later in the [577]*577testimony that Blasczak is the Polish spelling for Blasic.

Testimony showed that in the Tony Tracz lot on the left of the drawing, there were buried three small Tracz grandchildren, a daughter of plaintiff and her deceased husband, and a space reserved for the son-in-law, as evidenced by a large headstone. It was on this lot also that Anthony J. Tracz was buried in 1963. However, a portion of his grave is on the Stanislawczyk lot. It also developed from the testimony that at the extreme right of the Tony Tracz lot on the right side of the drawing are buried the parents of defendant John Blasic. This means, unquestionably, that Anthony J. Tracz is buried partially on a lot which does not belong to the Tracz family, and, in addition, that possibly Mr. and Mrs. John Blasic, Sr., are buried on a lot which does not belong to the Blasic family.

The main difficulty or controversy is that defendant John Blasic and his witnesses claim that his minor daughter, Marie Louise Blasic, who died June 23,1942, is buried in the left upper portion of the Tony Tracz lot on the right of the drawing, and that this was done at the direction of the then pastor of the church, who showed him the spot at which to dig the grave. Defendant John Blasic now objects to the removal of this child from that lot, and plaintiff Pauline Tracz desires that the child be removed in order that her husband Anthony J. Tracz, may be moved to the left portion of the Tracz lot on the right of the drawing, so that there will then be sufficient room remaining on that lot for her to be buried alongside of her husband.

While we do not have the benefit of any testimony from a representative of the church involved, it is evident from the testimony that one of the pastors of the church in years gone by inadvertently pointed out the wrong lot to John Blasic in which he was to bury his daughter, Marie Louise, and thereafter, Mr. and Mrs, Blasic were buried on the same lot. Because of the [578]*578emotional involvement between plaintiff and defendants, they have been unable to agree to any equitable division of the Tracz lot on the right of the drawing and the Blasic lot immediately below it.

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39 Pa. D. & C.2d 573, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracz-v-blasic-pactcomplcambri-1963.