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The Washington Times Online Edition

Dead husband’s divorce on hold

PITTSBURGH (AP) — John Yelenic and his wife separated in 2002, agreed to a divorce and even hammered out a property settlement.

But the Blairsville dentist was slain the day before he was to sign his divorce papers, setting the stage for what attorneys say is a first-of-its-kind request in Pennsylvania: a divorce decree after death.

The dentist’s divorce attorney, Effie Alexander, says simply that Mr. Yelenic would have wanted it that way. Another attorney who represents Mr. Yelenic’s estate thinks the decree is needed to protect a property settlement an Indiana County judge approved last week.

But a specialist in Pennsylvania family law says there is no reason to declare a dead man divorced because the dentist’s wife and adopted son will receive support under the property settlement, which legally overrides his will.

“What difference does the decree really make?” said Pittsburgh lawyer Jay Blechman, chairman of the family-law section of the Pennsylvania Bar Association. “As far as I can tell, there isn’t a difference.”

Miss Alexander isn’t so sure.

“We are, along with the estate attorney, conducting research to determine if there’s any significance to the decree being denied,” she said.

Officials in at least one other state are grappling with posthumous divorces.

In Connecticut, Hayley Kissel is seeking to divorce her estranged husband, Andrew, a millionaire developer found slain in his Greenwich home last month.

Judge Kevin Tierney said Friday a death doesn’t necessarily mean the marriage has been dissolved and suggested the case could end up in the court’s complex-litigation section if it is not resolved.

In Pennsylvania, Indiana County Judge Carol Hanna refused to issue the divorce decree after a May 19 hearing, but gave the dentist’s divorce attorney until June 2 to file written arguments on why one should be issued.

Mr. Yelenic and his wife, Michele, of Indiana, Pa., married in 1997 and adopted a son, J.J., now 8. The couple separated in 2002 and Mrs. Yelenic filed for divorce the next year, citing an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage.

Mr. Yelenic, 39, was slain at his home on April 13. Investigators have not identified a suspect, but don’t think his death was random. They have refused to say how he died, other than that he bled to death after a violent attack.

The strange case of the Yelenics’ divorce revolves around a January 2005 amendment to the state’s divorce code.

Under the amendment, a judge can posthumously enforce a property settlement if grounds for the divorce existed when the spouse died. Judge Hanna approved the settlement based on an affidavit Mr. Yelenic had signed saying the couple have lived apart for more than two years, which is grounds for divorce in Pennsylvania.

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