Dr. John SMIALEK, State Medical Investigator, Petitioner, v. Ruth Y. BEGAY, Minnie Conn, Harry K. Harrison, Rex Harrison and David Yazzie, Respondents.
No. 16243.
Supreme Court of New Mexico.
July 25, 1986.
721 P.2d 1306 | 104 N.M. 375
Earl Mettler, Shiprock, for respondents.
OPINION
WALTERS, Justice.
The only issue raised in the petition for certiorari is the standing of decedent‘s siblings, respondents, to join their mother, Hanagoni Bitsie, in a suit for damages resulting from an alleged wrongful autopsy of the decedent. The surrounding facts are sufficiently detailed in the opinion of the court of appeals. The trial court dismissed the claims of the brothers and sisters; the court of appeals reversed and reinstated them, holding that they had standing to assert a claim under
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State * * * subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
As petitioner points out for us, the court of appeals opinion addresses the elements of a claim which alleges violation of the constitutional right to free exercise of the Navajo religion. But the opinion avoids answering the question of who has standing to make such a claim within the factual context of this lawsuit. The question of standing focuses on the personal stake in
Under the determination of the court of appeals, any family member whose religious beliefs are offended by the conduct of an autopsy would have standing to bring suit and to allege a violation of his constitutional right to the free exercise of his religious beliefs. Such an interpretation, of course, could result in bringing to a halt all medical investigative procedures authorized or mandated by New Mexico law unless and until all family members having any interests in preventing those procedures had had the opportunity to veto the performance of the autopsy, even though all of them may not have had a priority right to claim the deceased‘s body for burial.
The court of appeals apparently equated the right given by statute (
Barela recognized the prevailing rule to be that a quasi-property right in a dead body vested in the “nearest relatives” of the deceased. Id. at 323, 355 P.2d at 136. That phrase was changed “to nearest relative” in In re Johnson, 94 N.M. 491, 494, 612 P.2d 1302, 1305 (1980). In Infield v. Cope, 58 N.M. 308, 312, 270 P.2d 716, 719 (1954), the court noted that among the rights of a broader group—“survivors * * in relation to the bodies of their dead“—was the “right to have the body in the condition in which it was left by death, without mutilation.”
In Barela, the claimants were the mother and father of an unmarried son; in Infield, claimant was the widow of the deceased man. Neither case indicates whether the decedent was survived by other “near” relatives; neither case mentioned a claim by other members of the deceased‘s family. Johnson was concerned with disinterment by court order, which was opposed by a surviving son. Other than the broad language in Barela, Infield and Johnson, we have not found any New Mexico cases, or statutes which establish any order of priorities relating to claims made regarding the rights to the remains of a decedent. The Wrongful Death Act (
In the instant case, the preliminary question of standing of the person or persons attempting to assert a violation of his or their first amendment right to free exercise of religion must be analyzed in accordance with the extent of the right allegedly invaded. Clearly, not all Navajos who embrace the belief that an autopsy is contrary to traditional Navajo religious principles, as
The Wrongful Death Act, the Probate Code, and even New Mexico‘s statutory article on Disposition of Dead Bodies,
We hold, therefore, that since, in the absence of a surviving spouse or child of the decedent, the mother was the only proper remaining survivor to claim and bury her son‘s body, she was the only proper remaining survivor with standing to assert an alleged violation of the free exercise of her religious beliefs. Consequently, without comment on the merits of any claim asserted, we reverse the court of appeals and reinstate the order of the district court dismissing respondents as party plaintiffs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
SOSA, Senior J., and FEDERICI, J., concur.
RIORDAN, C.J., concurs in result.
STOWERS, J., specially concurs.
STOWERS, Justice, specially concurring.
The only issue before this Court on Certiorari is whether the decedent‘s siblings have standing to assert a Section 1983 violation of their First Amendment right to free exercise of religion. I concur with the result reached in this Opinion insofar as it relates to that issue. I do not agree with other conclusions reached on other issues not before this Court.
