63 P. 170 | Cal. | 1900
John S. Enos died in Sonoma county on March 30, 1898. The plaintiff Susie T. Enos is his surviving wife, and the plaintiff Gertrude Willis is his daughter. For several years next before his death the deceased had not lived with his wife, but during that time lived at the residence of the defendant Rachael Jane Snyder, where he died. He left a will which contained a direction that the manner, time, and place of his burial should be "according to the wishes and directions of Mrs. R.J. Snyder," the said defendant. After his death the plaintiffs herein made demand of defendant Snyder for possession of his body for the purpose *69 of burying the same, and the demand was refused. Thereupon this action was commenced against Mrs. Snyder for a judgment declaring that plaintiffs are entitled to the possession of the dead body of the deceased for the purpose of burial, enjoining defendant from proceeding with the burial of said body and directing her to give to plaintiffs the possession thereof.
Defendant Snyder answered, setting up the clause in the will above referred to, and also verbal statements to the same effect made by the deceased before his death. Afterward E.S. Lippitt, the executor named in the will, was, on his own application, made a party defendant, and he filed an answer averring substantially the things set up in the answer of defendant Snyder. Demurrers to both answers were sustained, and judgment was entered for plaintiffs substantially as prayed for in the complaint. From this judgment defendants appeal. It is admitted that the record presents the sole question involved in the case, namely, Under the law of this state, did the respondents, as next of kin, have the right to the possession of the body of the deceased for the purpose of burying it, as against the appellants who claim that right under the will?
The general English and American authorities on the subject are not very satisfactory — at least, as to a contest like the one here involved between the next of kin and persons claiming under a will. It is quite well established, however, by those authorities that, in the absence of statutory provisions, there is no property in a dead body, that it is not part of the estate of the deceased person, and that a man cannot by will dispose of that which after his death will be his corpse. There are some expressions in some of the authorities cited by appellants to the effect that the right of burial is in the next of kin, "in the absence of any testamentary disposition"; but they were not in cases in which the right of testamentary disposition was involved. The case which is most directly in point here isWilliams v. Williams, L.R. 20 Ch. Div. 659. It is a recent case (1882) and expresses the law of England on the subject. In that case the deceased had by his will directed that after his death "his body should be given to his friend Eliza Williams, to be dealt with by her in such manner as he had directed to be done in a private letter to her." The body, however, was buried in a certain cemetery "by the *70
direction of his widow and one of his sons"; but afterward Eliza Williams succeeded in removing it from the cemetery and, having disposed of it in accordance with the direction of the will, she brought the action against the executors to recover the amount of the expenses which she had incurred in so doing. Kay, J., in his opinion, after referring to certain cases, says: "It follows that a man cannot by will dispose of his dead body. If there be no property in a dead body, it is impossible that by will or any other instrument the body can be disposed of. I asked for any authority in conflict with these cases, but none was produced. I have referred to the books of the greatest authority on the question, and I believe that there is no authority in the least degree in conflict with these cases. It follows that the direction in this codicil to the executors to deliver over the body to Miss Williams, who is not one of the executors, is a direction which, in point of law, could not be enforced, and was void." The current of American authorities, although there is some conflict, is to the same effect. (Griffith v. Charlotte etc.R.R. Co.,
But as some one must, of necessity, bury the dead, and must have the temporary possession of the dead body for that purpose, in the few cases where there has been any question on the subject equity has been invoked, and courts of equity have assumed jurisdiction and have given the necessary remedies; and it has been generally declared that the right of burial of a deceased wife or husband belongs to the surviving spouse, and in other cases to the next of kin being present and having the ability to perform the service. (Durell v. Hayward, 9 Gray, 249; Fox v.Gordon, 16 Phila. 185; Larson v. Chase,
The appellant Lippitt in his answer bases his alleged right on the directions given by the deceased in his will and verbally, *71
and not upon his authority as executor independent of such directions, and the arguments of counsel for appellants rest mainly on that basis; but there is in their briefs some shadow of contention that an executor or administrator has, by mere virtue of his office, the right to bury the body and to the possession of it for that purpose. There are expressions to that effect in the English books and particularly in the older ones, and they may also be found in some American authorities; but the current of American authorities is the other way. Those expressions are found generally in cases where there was no contest between executors and next of kin — as in Williams v. Williams, supra,
where the body had been buried by the executors by the direction of the next of kin. Of course, it is generally provided by statute — as in this state by section 1643 of the Code of Civil Procedure — that executors or administrators must pay "funeral expenses"; but it has certainly been the custom in this country for the next of kin, and not the executor or administrator, to have the custody of the dead body before the funeral, and to bury it. Indeed, under our probate system, it cannot be determined who the executor or administrator is until after the appropriate time for the funeral has elapsed, and the burial of the dead body is not to be found in the statutory enumeration of the rights and duties of executors and administrators. In American and English Encyclopedia of Law, volume 8, page 837, it is said in the text as follows: "In England it has been held that an executor has the right to the custody and possession of the body of his decedent until it is properly buried; but this doctrine has no support in the United States"; and the cases cited support the text. InRenihan v. Wright,
We have considered the subject as presented in the general authorities because appellants contend that there are no statutory provisions here which are determinative of the question *72
involved, but we think that our statutory law does definitely settle the question against appellant's contention. Section
The judgment is affirmed.
Temple, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.