1 Mo. App. 136 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action in the nature of an action of replevin, brought under our statute for the claim and delivery of personal property, by the respondent, for a certain metallic casket or coffin, of the value of $90, with its contents, which, it is alleged, were wrongfully taken and detained by the defendant. The affidavit attached to the petition alleges that plaintiff is the owner of the casket, and entitled to its possession; that it was wrongfully taken, and is wrongfully detained, by defendant; that plaintiff’s cause of action accrued within one year; and that plaintiff will be in danger of losing his property unless it be taken out of defendant’s possession.
A bond was given and the order of delivery granted, and the casket and contents, were taken by the sheriff from defendant’s lot in Bellefontaine cemetery, where they were interred, and delivered to plaintiff.
Under the statute (Prac. Act, Art. 6, sec. 6, Wag. Stat. 1025), if plaintiff states in his affidavit that the property taken was wrongfully taken, and his right of action accrued within one year, defendant shall not be allowed to retain possession, which otherwise he might do on giving a counter-bond.
The answer denies all the material allegations of the petition, and states that Maggie J. Guthrie, wife of plaintiff ■and daughter of defendant, died on January 25, 1873, at the residence of her father, the defendant, in St. Louis; that defendant owned- then, and now owns and possesses, a lot in Bellefontaine cemetery, wherein are interred the mother of deceased and her sister ; that the deceased, Mag.gie, on her death-bed, requested to be buried in said lot, and that plaintiff assented to her request, and that she was so buried with his assent; that deceased was inclosed, by ■defendant, after her death, in the metallic casket sued for herein, and buried as before stated; and that the casket and body have, in obedience to the process herein, been disinterred by the sheriff, and delivered to plaintiff. Defendant prays ■that the casket and body be returned to him at the place from whence they were taken, and for damages and costs.
The replication denies that Maggie, the deceased, requested to be buried in defendant’s lot, and denies any assent on the part of plaintiff to any such request.
From the evidence in the case it appears that plaintiff ■and defendant were copartners in a hardware store, under the style of Guthrie & Company; that plaintiff was secretly married to'deceased in 1871, and that, some months after-wards, they were openly married, with the consent of ■defendant; that on her death-bed she desired, in the presence of her husband, to be buried in her father’s lot. There is evidence tending to show that she requested a grave to be kept there for husband and child by her side, and that this
The plaintiff asked an instruction to the effect that, if the-casket was the property of plaintiff, and withheld from him by defendant, he should recover; also that, if plaintiff bought and paid for the casket, and demanded of defendant to permit the same to be taken up and buried in another lot, he is entitled to recover, even though deceased requested to be buried in defendant’s lot. These instructions were refused, and plaintiff excepted.
The court gave the following instructions, of its own. motion:
“ If the jury find for the plaintiff, they will assess the-damages at the sum of one cent. If they find for the-defendant, they will assess the value of the property, and damages for the taking and detention of the same by plaintiff. The measure of damages, in case of finding for the defendant, will be interest on the assessed value of the property at 6 per cent, per annum, from the time when such property was taken from the defendant to the time of*140 •trial.” To the giving of this instruction the defendant ■excepted.
The court gave the following instruction, at the instance ■of plaintiff:
“If the jury believe that the deceased wife of plaintiff, before her decease, requested to be buried in the lot of the ■defendant, and that plaintiff acceded to that request, yet if they believe that such assent was given upon conditions which have not been complied with or waived by plaintiff, they will find for plaintiff, if they further find.that plaintiff bought and paid for the casket.” To the giving of this ■instruction defendant excepted.
At the instance of defendant the court gave the following instruction, and plaintiff excepted:
“ If the jury believe from the evidence that the deceased was the wife of the plaintiff, and, in anticipation of her ■death, made a request of her father, the defendant, that on her death he would place her remains in the same lot or place of interment with her deceased sister, and that the plaintiff knew of such request or was informed of such request before the burial of his wife, or was present at the funeral service at the grave and place of interment of his ■deceased wife and did not dissent from such place of interment, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this .action.”
There ivas a verdict and judgment for plaintiff. The defendant in due time filed a motion for a new trial, which being overruled, the case is brought here by appeal.
It is manifest from what has been said that, in spite of the ■•allegations of the pleadiugs, this is no dispute for the possession of a burial casket, but a contest for the possession of the mortal remains of the poor lady who lay, when the suit was commenced, in the grave-yard at Bellefontaine. It is shocking to humanity that such a contest should have 'been carried on in such a manner and through such agencies;
But waiving that, with what propriety can it be said in this case that the casket sued for, and its contents, were, at the commencement of the suit, in the possession of defendant, or are now in the possession of plaintiff ? It nowhere-appears that the defendant owned the fee, or was seized and possessed of the ground in which deceased was interred. That ground probably belonged to the Bellefontaine Cemetery corporation; the defendant evidently had a mere user in the lot for certain purposes, and the casket was in the possession of the corporation; the writ should, therefore,, have been properly addressed to them, if it could have-issued at all.
The sheriff, in our opinion, might properly have refused to obey such a writ, and should have done so. It is none-of his business to disinter the dead and to deliver a decomposing corpse, under pretext of getting possession of a. metallic, casket.
■ As far as the substantial rights of these parties are concerned — the real matter in dispute between them — though it. is not-properly-before us, we may say that, in our opinion,, whatever right the husband had to bury his wife terminated
So far we have no difficulty; but the question presents itself as to the proper judgment to be rendered under the peculiar circumstances of this case. The suit was already executed when the case was reached for trial in the Circuit ■Court. This poor lady, buried on January 28, 1873, was ■disinterred on May 19, 1873, and has been reburied in the lot of her husband’s mother ever since. If judgment for the defendant be given here, or the cause be reversed and remanded, to be proceeded with below in accordance with this opinion, as defendant in his answer claims the prop■erty and demands a return of it, if plaintiff has possession ■of the property sued for, judgment would be against plaintiff ¡and his sureties that he return the property or pay the ¡assessed value, at the election of defendant, and also dam.ages for the taking and detention, with costs ; and the body being now buried — though wrongfully — with the relations of the husband, according to his directions, neither the body nor the coffin can, in our opinion, be lawfully removed ¡against his will. There is no property in a corpse; the relations have, in regard to it, onty the right of interment, ■and this right having been once exercised by the father, though against the husband’s consent, or by the husband, though against the father’s consent, no right to the corpse remains except the right to protect it from insult. As it is admitted, however, that the coffin and the body are now interred in the lot of the mother and brother-in-law of plaintiff; as they are not only in the grave, but in a grave lot which he does not own even in that limited sense in which a burying lot in a public cemetery is ordinarily -owned, they are confessedly not in the possession of the.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is accordingly reversed, and judgment entered in this court in favor of defendant; for 1 cent damages and costs.