BLANCHARD v. WESTVIEW CEMETERY, INC.
45936
Court of Appeals of Georgia
JUNE 8, 1971
REHEARING DENIED JULY 9, 1971
124 Ga. App. 195 | 184 S.E.2d 397
JORDAN, Presiding Judge
We therefore reverse the judgment and remand to the trial court with direction that it enter as its judgment, nunc pro tunc, the original sentence of two yеars to be served on probation subject to the payment of a $500 fine, but with the condition of a haircut deleted.
Judgment reversed with direction. Eberhardt and Whitman, JJ., concur.
45936. BLANCHARD v. WESTVIEW CEMETERY, INC.
JORDAN, Presiding Judge. The alleged claim of the plaintiff, Mrs. Hazel Blanchard, is predicated on an intentional tort in moving the body of her late husband, Paul Blanchard, and the monument, from one grave site to another. She appeals from the grant of a summary judgment for the defendant.
Paul Blanchard died on August 24, 1968. The next day Mrs. Blanchard, accompanied by a representative of the defendant, selected a grave site, and agreed to purchase what she believed to be the site selected and another, described in the written contract as Lot 350, Section 70, Sites 1 аnd 2. On August 27, 1968, the body was interred in the cemetery in a site which was satisfactory to Mrs. Blanchard, and which she thought was the site she had selected and had contracted to purchase. In addition to the purchase price of the lot Mrs. Blanchard paid an additional fee for opening and closing the grave.
Without any further effort to contact Mrs. Blanchard, the general manager then directed the transfer to a grave site one grave site nearer to a road, a distance of some three feet, so that its new location corresponded in fact to the records. This transfer, including the monument, was accomplished without notice to Mrs. Blanchard. When Mrs. Blanchard visited the cemetery and discovered the move she telephoned the office of the cemetery, and was informed by an employee, who examined the contract and interment request and noticed that the lot number on both was the same, that her late husband wаs buried in the correct location. This employee was unaware of the actual transfer from one site to another. When this employee informed the manager that Mrs. Blanchard had inquired about the grave, he informed Mrs. Blanchard by letter that her late husband was buried in the correct location, but omitted any reference to the transfer.
The contract for the purchase of the lot contains the following:
“It is hereby agreed and understood by and between the parties hereto that said burial space(s) are bought subject to the rules of the seller, and the buyer expressly agrees to be bound by all such rules and all amendments and new rules hereafter adopted.”
Included among the rules and regulations of the cemеtery are the following:
“All interments, disinterments and removals must be made at such time, in such manner and subject to the payment of such charges as fixed by the cemetery management. Rule 3-13.”
“The cemetery reserves, and shall have, the right to correct any errors that may be made by it either in making interments,
disinterments or removals, or in the description, transfer, or conveyance of any interment property, either by cancelling such conveyance and substituting and conveying in lieu thereof other interment property of equal value and similar location as far as possible, or as may be selected by the cemetery, or, in the sole discretion of the cemetery, by refunding the amount of money paid on account of said рurchase. In the event the error shall involve the interment of the remains of any person in such property, the cemetery reserves and shall have, the right to remove and re-inter the remains to such other property of equal value and similar location as may be substituted and conveyed in lieu thereof. The cemetery shall also have the right to correct any errors made by placing an improper inscription, including an incorrect name or date, either on the memorial or on the container for cremated remains. The cemetery shall not be liable in damages for any error so made.” Rule 3-H. “It shall be the duty of the lot owner to notify the cemetery of any change in his Post Office address. Notice sent to a lot owner at the last address on file in the office of the cemetery shall be considered sufficient and proper legal notification for all purposes.” Rule 15-A.
1. The making of an agreement on Sunday, August 25, 1968, for the purchase of a lot in which to bury a spouse who died the previous Saturday is, in our opinion, a work of necessity excepted from the statutory prohibition (former
2. Regardless of whether Mrs. Blanchard ever received or examined the rules and regulations of the cemetery they are a part of the contract of purchase which she signed. The fact that the final sentence of Rule 3-H is an exculpatory clause purporting to relieve the cemetery from liability has no real relevаncy in disposing of the present case, for in our opinion the action of the cemetery in moving the grave to a site corresponding to the record of the site purchased and the site designated for interment is clearly authorized by the provisions of Rule 3-H preceding the exculpatory clause. Being an action authorized under
In view of the contract, and the authority of the cemetery under its rules and regulations which were a part of the contract, we consider it immaterial that a genuine issue of fact may exist in respect to the manner in which the error arose, i.e., whether the contract and interment record represent the site actually selected by the plaintiff, or whether the original place of interment is the site selected and which the plaintiff intended to purchase. See West View Corp. v. Alston, 208 Ga. 122 (65 SE2d 406); Goodwin v. Candace, Inc., 92 Ga. App. 438 (88 SE2d 723).
3. It is contended that a permit is not required for disinterment and reinterment within the same cemetery, but that such permit is required only when a body is removed from one cemetery to another where transit is involved. This seems to be the clear import of
Judgment affirmed. Bell, C. J., Hall, P. J., Eberhardt, Deen and Quillian, JJ., concur. Pannell, Whitman and Evans, JJ., dissent.
Sanders, Hester, Holley, Ashmore and Boozer, Thomas R. Burnside, Jr., A. Montague Miller, Fred K. Harvey, Jr., for appellant.
Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy, Frank Love, Jr., Randall L. Hughes, for appellee.
1. There is evidence which authorizes a finding that the interment lot selected, bought and paid for, was the lot on which plaintiff‘s husband was originally buried before his alleged unauthorized disinterment by the defendant, and that the error was one of description in the deed and not an error of interment; and the contract between the parties wherein the plaintiff consented to disinterment in order to correct errors does not give permission to correct this type of error by moving the body from the lot actually purchased to a lot not purchased, but one described by error in the deed.
The deposition of Paul C. Blanchard, taken by defendant, reads in part:
“Q. As I understand it, there was some misunderstanding about the cemetery lots, is that correct? A. As far as I‘m concerned there wasn‘t any misunderstanding, Mr. Hull. We went to the cemetery the day following my father‘s death, on Sunday, my mother and myself, and I think there were some other members of the family, but I don‘t recall. At that time, the time we arrived at thе cemetery, we spoke with the lady, I believe her name is Mrs. McWilliams, and informed her that we wanted to buy a cemetery lot . . . Q. May I interrupt you—were you talking about getting a family section? A. We were talking about getting a two-grave lot. Q. Just for your mother and daddy? A. That‘s right, because the rest of the family was spread out around. She suggested this section—I believe it was Section Seventy, I may be mistaken on the
number—and with her in the car we rode around to this section. It was a new section, there were just a few graves in this section, and we stopped the car and got out and looked around, she asked what we thought of it, and it seemed acceptable. It seemed to be in the price category that was, in my opinion, commensurate with my fathеr‘s estate in life. She—of course, we had our pick of the whole place—she said, ‘How about this area right here?’ indicating close to the roadway—and we looked. There was a large tree, you know, not too far away, and it was a pleasant site—it was on a hillside—and we all agreed that it looked very nice. She searched around on the ground and finally located an iron pipe. From this iron pipe she looked at her charts and plats and located a section . . . Q. Now when you are talking about ‘she,’ you‘re talking about the lady representing the people with the cemetery, is that correct? A. That is correct—I believe it was Mrs. McWilliams. After locating this iron pipe she located this particulаr plot and indicated that this was a two-grave lot, and wanted to know what we thought of it . . . This is a particular dislike of mine—in a cemetery, when you are walking, I don‘t like to step on a grave, and I don‘t always know where they are, so I liked this because you could see it. It was right close there. I also had the impression that it was very nice, the place she had showed us was not so crowded that you could not pull your car to the curb and get out of the car without having to step right on the grave. There was ample room back from the roadway, and this was to my liking—so with some little discussion among the family members, my mother agreed to buy this plot. We went back to the cemetery office, discussed the details of buying it . . . Q. Go on, excuse me. A. That is the sum total of my recollection at this time of what transpired at the cemetery, regarding the buying of this lot—and as I stated at first, I don‘t think there was any misunderstanding. I think it was clearly understood at that time what was going on. And, of course, when we went to the burial, which took place the following day, that same lot that we had been shown was opened, and the burial took place . . . Q. Now, the fact of the matter is that he was buried in a lot other than the lot that was sold to you, right? Mr. Burnside: I didn‘t understand what counsel said—the lot that was sold, or the lot that . . . Mr. Hull: The lot that was sold to the family for the purpose of the burial of the father? A. In answer to your question, I‘d have to disagree with that proposal. I contend that the lot that was sold to us was the lot that he was buried on . . . Q. In other words, you stated that the lot your father was buried on was the lot that you saw and that you thought, and your mother thought, you had purchased, is that correct? A. That‘s correct. That‘s the lot that the lady found after having first found an iron pin in place. After finding that iron pin she located these lots and showed us these lots, and these are the lots that my mother agreed to and subsequently purchased.” (Emphasis supplied.)
It cannot be seriously questioned that this evidence authorizes a finding that the burial occurred in the lot selected and paid for by the plaintiff and that the error was in the description contained in the deed.
While it is true the cemetery reserved the right “to correct any errors as may be made by it, either in making interments, disinterments, or removals, or in the description, transfer, or conveyance of any interment property,” the very section of the rules (3H) of the cemetery reserving such right also specified in what manner the corrections could be made. One of the manners was “either by cancelling such conveyance and substituting and conveying in lieu thereof other interment property of equal value and similar location as far as possible, or as may be selected by the cemetery, or, in the sole discretion of the cemetery, by refunding the amount of money paid on account of said purchase.” This clearly refers to correcting an error in a conveyance or deed. What does it say about errors in interment? “In the event the error shall involve the interment of the remains of any person in such property, the cemetery reserves and shall have, the right to remove and re-inter the remains to such other property of equal value and similar location as may be substituted and conveyed in lieu thereof.” This seems to only cover an error in placing a body on the wrong lot. If the evidence referred to above be believed by the jury, there was no consent given by the contract to remove the body. It therefore appears that the contract between the parties wherein the plaintiff consented to disinterment in order to correct errors does not give permission to correct this type of error by moving the body from the lot purchased tо a lot not purchased,
2. However, assuming for the purpose of argument that the contract should be construed as giving such permission to disinter the body under these circumstances where there was an error only in the deed, this permission given, by proper construction of the contract, was only a permission to lawfully disinter the body; and the disinterment without a permit under Section 88-1717 (e) of the New Public Health Code (Ga. L. 1964, pp. 499, 591;
It then becomes necessary to determine whether the evidence would have authorized a finding by a jury that the disinterment was intentionally made. From what is said above, it clearly appears that the disinterment was done without the consent of the plaintiff and was done unlawfully, without securing a permit.
The above expresses my opinion as to a proper disposition of this case. However, I think it apрropriate that I discuss some of the contentions that have been made inimical to the conclusion I have reached.
One of these contentions is that the ruling in Gulf Oil Corp. v. Stanfield, 213 Ga. 436, 437 (99 SE2d 209) that “[a] breach of duty to the State does not necessarily involve a breach of duty to others. Hence the violation of a penal statute can not be relied upon as actionable negligence, unless such violation is the proximate cause of the injury” precludes a recovery here. In that case, it was held that the erection of a sign without a license near a roadway or upon a roadway was not, as a matter of fact, the proximate cause of the injuries sustained in the case, but that the sole proximate cause of the injury was the intervening act оf another party. We have no such situation here for the reasons that (1) this is not an action based on negligence and (2) the breach of duty by not complying with the law in securing a disinterment permit performs two functions in this case (1) destroys the defendant‘s defense that it had secured the plaintiff‘s permission and (2) such fact becomes an integral part of the evidence tending to show an intentional tort on the part of the defendant.
The other contention is that
WHITMAN, Judge, dissenting. I concur in Division 1 of the dissenting opinion of Judge Pannell.
EVANS, Judge, dissenting. In August, 1968, Mrs. Hazel Blanchard purchased a cemetery lot and entered into a written contract with Westview Cemetery, Inc., for burial of her deceased husband, in Fulton County, Georgia. The burial took place within
In September, 1969, after the passage of more than 12 months, the cemetery corporation contends it discovered the burial had taken place upon the wrong lot, and although there was no hurry for so doing, it desired to disinter the corpse and re-inter it on the correct lot. It also moved the grave marker or memorial which it contends it had a right to do to correct its error. See Rule 21-A of its Rules and Regulations.
The cemetery corporation also claimed the right to correct errors under Rule 3-H of its rules, which provides in pertinent part: “The cemetery reserves, and shall have the right to correct any errors that may be made by it either in making interments, disinterments, or removals, or in the description, transfer or conveyance of any interment property . . .”
However, attention is also called to Rule 3-A, that besides being subject to these rules and regulations, “all interments, disinterments and removals are made subject to the orders and laws of the properly constituted authorities of the city, county and state.”
The cemetery corporation contends it made one telephone call in an effort to contact Mrs. Hazel Blanchard, and thereafter did absolutely nothing further to provide an opportunity for her and members of her family to be present at the disinterment and re-interment of her husband. It was shown that if a letter had been written to Mrs. Blanchard at her Atlanta address, she would have received it.
No permit for disinterment and re-interment was secured (or even applied for) nor was any funeral director or embalmer in charge of or present at the disinterment and re-interment of the corpse. Three gravediggers performed these rites, and Charles E. Bowen, vice president and general manager of the cemetery corporation, at some later date discussed the matter with them, and two of them were not sure as to how the disinterment and re-in
Mrs. Blanchard filed suit for damages against the cemеtery corporation in Fulton Superior Court, alleging that “the aforesaid disinterment and re-interment of the body of petitioner‘s deceased husband was performed by defendant without authority, in violation of law, and without notice to or consent of your petitioner and has resulted in injury and damage to petitioner‘s peace, feelings, and happiness and has caused your petitioner extreme distress, agony, and mental anguish . . .” Motion for summary judgment was filed by defendant, and granted, and plaintiff appeals.
1. The disinterment and re-interment were accomplished in violation of the statutes of Georgia, and therefore afford plaintiff a cause of action. New Public Health Code,
“A permit for disinterment and re-interment shall bе required prior to disinterment of a dead body or fetus except as authorized by regulation or otherwise provided by law. Such permit shall be issued by the local registrar of the district in which the cemetery where the body was originally interred is located to a licensed funeral director, embalmer, or to the person acting as such upon application filed in accordance with the rules and regulations promulgated hereunder.”
Appellee‘s brief, at pp. 13-14, admits a failure to obtain said permit, and seeks to justify such failure under the following contentions: (a) This law applies only where the corpse is transferred from one cemetery to another cemetery; (b) Subsection (f) of the statute provides that samе is to be implemented by regulations issued by the Department of Public Health, and counsel contends “no rules or regulations have ever been promulgated under this law.”
This justification is ineffectual as to both grounds. Respecting the question of whether the Department of Public Health has issued such rules and regulations, this court cannot take judicial
Further, as the cemetery wished to disinter the body, and as it had to secure a permit before so doing, the statute makes a clear and definite pronouncement as to the procedure it should have followed in order to have a regulation promulgated as follows: “An interested person may petition an agency requesting the promulgation, amendment or repeal of a rule . . . Within 30 days after submission of a petition, the agency either shall deny the petition in writing (stating its reason for the denial) or shall initiate rule-making proceedings in accordance with Section 4 . . .” See Administrative Procedure Act, supra;
It was therefore the duty of the cemetery to apply to the local registrar of the district in which the cemetery was located for a permit, and as it did not evеn apply, the question of its bad faith or good faith must be determined by a jury.
2. In cases of this kind, the question of good faith is paramount.
Again, in Rivers v. Greenwood Cemetery, 194 Ga. 524, 526 (22 SE2d 134) the court, after deciding that a husband had the right to move his wife‘s body from the space where it had been mistakenly buried, encumbered that right with the following condition: “. . . provided this right be exercised in a proper manner, and from motives which do not appear to be unreasonable.”
In the case of McDonald v. Butler, 10 Ga. App. 845, 849 (74 SE 573), this court held: “The mere absence of a headstone or monument would not excuse the desecrаtion of the grave. When it was discovered, no matter how, that a human body had been interred on the lot, the grave should have been held sacred and the body allowed to remain undisturbed in its last resting place. Certainly, upon discovery of the grave, the most diligent and searching inquiry should have been made, to discover ownership of the lot and the identity of the person whose remains lay buried there.” (Emphasis supplied).
Here, the mistake remained undiscovered for more than 12 months, and then, when there was no particular hurry, the cemetery corporation made one telephone call, did not write a letter (which would have been received by Mrs. Hazel Blanchard had it been written and addressed to her) and then, within 30 days, proceeded to disinter and re-inter the body in the absence of the family of the deceased. “Good faith” or “bad faith” of the defendant here is not a matter that can be determined by a judge, but must be determined by a jury.
The question of good faith is ordinarily one of fact for a jury. McCamy v. Higdon, 50 Ga. 629, 631; Lee v. O‘Quin, 103 Ga. 355, 364 (30 SE 356), and cit.; Chattahoochee Fertilizer Co. v. Quinn, 169 Ga. 801, 804 (151 SE 496); Street v. Collier, 118 Ga. 470, 480 (45 SE 294), and cit.; Latham v. Fowler, 192 Ga. 686, 692 (16 SE2d 591). A witness may testify that an act was performed in good faith, which has been held to amount to a statement of fact and not a mere conclusion. Hale v. Robertson & Co., 100 Ga. 168 (27 SE 937); Acme Brewing Co. v. Central R. &c. Co., 115 Ga. 494, 502 (42 SE 8); Hasty v. Wilson, 223 Ga. 739, 750 (158 SE2d 915). But if there be facts from which a want of good faith can be inferred, this creates an issue as to a statement as to the mental state of the party that he acted “in good faith.” In many instances a presumption of good faith arises in the performance of an act. Latham v. Fowler, 192 Ga. 686, 692, supra; Gurr v. Gurr, 198 Ga. 493, 502 (32 SE2d 507); Hearn v. Leverette, 213 Ga. 286 (99 SE2d 147). But good faith is usually a jury question since it alonе must test the reasonableness and truthfulness of the performance of the act by comparing it to all the facts and circumstances attending the transaction. Baxley v. Baxley, 117 Ga. 60, 63 (43 SE 436); Thompson v. Glover, 120 Ga. 440, 442 (47 SE 935).
If the Department of Health has not issued rules and regulations to implement the law, where did that leave the appellee in this case? It would leave him without a permit and in violation of the law. The brief on behalf of the cemetery recites that the Department of Public Health has not issued rules and regulations implementing the statute as to disinterment of dead bodies. As previously stated, this is not proof of that fact, but it is interesting to note that nothing is stated as to how and when the cemetery gained this information. If it had filed a request with the registrar for a permit to disinter (as required by statute), which it did not do, and if the information as to lack of rules and regulations had been gained in that process, this at least might have reflected on the good faith or bad faith of said Cemetery Corporation. But it makes no such contention, and it must be presumed that it did not gain this information until after the disinterment of the body, in accordance with Holland v. Sanfax Corp., 106 Ga. App. 1, 5 (126 SE2d 442) which holds: “The party opposing the motion [for summary judgment] is to be given the benefit of all reasonable doubts in determining whether a genuine issue exists and the trial court must give that party the benefit of all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence.”
3. The defendant cemetery can not successfully rely on the contract in this case as justification for its conduct. First of all, the contract itself provides in Rule 3-A of Rules and Regulations (of which only one copy seems to have existed) “all interments, disinterments and removals are made subject to the orders and laws of the properly constituted authorities of the city, county and state.” (Emphasis supplied).
Rule 3-H of those Rules and Regulations purported to grant the right to “correct any errors that may be made by it either in making interments, disinterments, or removals, . . .” But the law writes into each and every contract that it must not violate the law; and any contract made against the statutes or public policy of this State are void.
4. Finally, why was it necessary to disinter and re-inter the body in the first place? Who made the mistake? While this case is not in equity, equity follows the law, and these equitable maxims apply.
5. It has long been recognized in this State that the owner of an easement of burial in a cemetery lot, or one who is rightfully in possession of it, may recover damages from a person or persons who wrongfully enters upon and disinters the remains of persons buried therein. It has further been held, in а suit for wrongfully disinterring a dead body, that if the injury has been wanton and malicious or the result of gross negligence or a reckless disregard of the rights of others, equivalent to an intentional violation of them, exemplary damages may be awarded, in estimating which the injury to the natural feelings of the plaintiff may be taken into consideration. Jacobus v. Congregation of the Children of Israel, 107 Ga. 518 (33 SE 853, 73 ASR 141); Wright v. Hollywood Cemetery Corp., 112 Ga. 884 (38 SE 94, 52 LRA 621); Roumillot v. Gardner, 113 Ga. 60 (38 SE 362, 53 LRA 729); Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Wilson, 123 Ga. 62, 67 (51 SE 24, 3 AC 128).
Thus it appears that the defendant admitted removal of the body from the grave, relying upon verbiage in a covenant. But the law is by implication written into all contracts, and by express terms is written into the contract in question, and requires the issuance of a permit before the body may be disinterred, which permit was not issued or even applied for.
Accordingly, I dissent from the ruling on motion for summary judgment, that the cemetery had full authority to desecrate the grave and remove the body and re-inter it elsewhere, under the above facts and circumstances.
