Dr. Ramon Powers Executive Director Kansas State Historical Society 120 W. 10th Street Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Dr. Powers:
As executive director of the Kansas state historical society, you request our opinion regarding the meaning of the term "unmarked burial site" as defined by the unmarked burial sites preservation act, K.S.A.
You inform us that you have been contacted by various local officials and individuals who have asked the historical society to take responsibility for unmarked graves in what you believe are known but abandoned cemeteries. Most recently, Ellis county officials have suggested that the state historical society has statutory responsibility over human remains buried in the old Boot Hill cemetery located in the city of Hays. Research by local officials indicates that the old cemetery contains as many as sixty bodies in unmarked graves. The area is presently in use as a city park. It is your position that the unmarked burial sites preservation act does not apply to the old Boot Hill cemetery because it is a known cemetery, notwithstanding the fact that all grave markers have long since been removed.
As you know, the unmarked burial sites preservation act was enacted in 1989 to supplement numerous other Kansas statutes which generally provided only for the protection of human remains buried in cemeteries or marked graves. See K.S.A.
The act also directs the unmarked burial sites preservation board to establish and maintain a registry of unmarked burial sites in Kansas, provide consultation in the event of potential or actual disturbance of unmarked burial sites, and adopt rules and regulations to administer and enforce the act. K.S.A.
In addition to the regulatory responsibilities specifically delegated to the unmarked burial sites preservation board, the act also gives the state historical society jurisdiction under certain circumstances over "human skeletal remains" and any goods interred with such human remains. K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
Because it contains criminal penalties, the act is regarded as a penal statute, and we are therefore required to strictly construe its language. General Foods Corp. v. Priddle,
The act defines "unmarked burial site" to mean "any interment by whatever means of human skeletal remains, other than a burial sitein a cemetery otherwise protected by Kansas statute." K.S.A.
The well-documented legislative history of the act reveals that its purpose was to extend the scope of statutory protection for burial sites to ensure protection for human remains buried in locations not within the commonly understood meaning of the term "cemetery," particularly ancient burial grounds of native American Indians. See Attorney General Opinion No. 88-73, at 6, 9 (effect of proposed legislation to ensure state protection of all human skeletal remains, not just those in marked graves or buried in recognized cemeteries; human remains buried in known cemeteries or under markers are already protected by criminal statutes). Seegenerally Minutes, House Committee on Federal and State Affairs, February 22, 1989, and attachments. In order to understand the intended scope of the act, we must therefore determine the meaning of the term "cemetery" as well as the scope of statutory protection for cemeteries.
The Kansas Supreme Court has defined the term "cemetery" as "a place or area of ground set apart for the burial of the dead."
See State ex rel. Stephan v. Lane,
More recently, the legislature has defined the term for purposes of a statute addressing the responsibility of municipalities for maintaining the character of cemeteries within their control. Enacted in 1977, K.S.A.
Under the statute, the absence of any visible grave markings is irrelevant to the question of whether a parcel of land qualifies as a cemetery or burial grounds.
"The fact that any tract of land has been set apart for burial purposes and that a part or all of such tract has been used for burial purposes shall be evidence that such grounds were set aside and used for burial purposes regardless of whether graves are visible on any part of the grounds." K.S.A.
12-1441 (b). (Emphasis added).
Consistent with the terminology used in the statute, the term "cemetery" may be used interchangeably with the words "graveyard," "burial ground," or "place of burial," and it includes not only the ground where interments are made but also the roads, paths, and appurtenant grounds used for ornamentation in connection with burial sites. Percival E. Jackson, supra, at 185-86, 187; Arlington Cemetery Corp. v. Hoffman,
"[a] cemetery is a plot of land set apart for the burial of the dead; and is created by the act which sets it apart, marking and distinguishing it from the adjoining land, with some avowal or act showing that it is intended for the purposes of burial." Sidney Perley, Mortuary Law 117 (1896) (citing Concordia Cemetery Ass'n v. Minnesota Northwestern R.R. Co.,
121 Ill. 199 ,211 ,12 N.E. 536 (1887)).
See also Percival E. Jackson, supra, at 186. Whether a particular parcel of land qualifies as a "cemetery" is a question of fact to be determined from the particular circumstances.Damon v. State,
Once established, a cemetery retains its character as such even after burials have been discontinued or the cemetery has been abandoned. See State ex rel. Stephan v. Lane,
You inform us that Hays city officials claim that the burial area in question is not a cemetery because it was never legally platted. The statutes authorizing cemetery corporations to convey cemetery lots require them to first survey and plat lands into burial lots and record the plat with the register of deeds of the county where the burial lots are located. See K.S.A.
We think the factual determination whether a particular burial site qualifies for protection under the unmarked burial sites preservation act properly rests in the first instance with the board, which is charged with administering the act. See K.S.A.
In addition to your general question, you specifically seek guidance with regard to the application of the act to abandoned cemeteries. We note that abandoned cemeteries are protected by a number of Kansas statutes to ensure their continued care and maintenance. See, e.g., K.S.A.
You do not advise us whether the old Boot Hill cemetery in Hays has been judicially declared an abandoned cemetery. See State exrel. Stephan v. Lane,
In summary, a cemetery is a parcel of land that has been set apart for the burial of the dead. Once established, a cemetery retains its character as such even after burials have been discontinued, as long as human remains are interred there. Burial sites in abandoned cemeteries are protected by other Kansas statutes and are therefore excluded from the definition of "unmarked burial site" as a matter of law. Whether or not a particular burial site is located in a cemetery is a question of fact. The responsibility for determining whether a specific burial site is an "unmarked burial site" as defined in the unmarked burial sites preservation act rests in the first instance with the unmarked burial sites preservation board, which is charged with administering the act.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
J. Lyn Entrikin Goering Assistant Attorney General
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