—Stanley Walsh, M.D., and Southwestern Corporation Medical Group, a corporation, appeal from the dismissal of their cross-complaint for spoliation of evidence following the sustaining of a demurrer without leave to amend.
Appellants are defendants in an action for wrongful death arising from alleged medical malpractice. The wrongful death complaint was filed by respondent Francis Caidin, surviving spouse of decedent Stanley R. Caidin. The wrongful death complaint alleged that prior to his death on July 16, 1989, decedent was under the care of appellants (and other health care providers who are not parties to this appeal). It allеged that decedent died as a proximate result of negligent treatment by appellants and others.
Appellants filed a cross-complaint against Francis Caidin and her attorney, respondent David Drexler, for “1. Spoliation of Evidence; 2. Conspiracy to Destroy Evidence; [and] 3. Interference with Prospective Economic Advantage.” Appellants alleged that the cremation of Stanley Caidin’s body, despite a prior request by aрpellants for an autopsy, deprived appellants of evidence of the cause of death. Appellants claimed that respondents owed appellants a duty to preserve evidence and that rеspondents either intentionally or negligently destroyed critical evidence.
Respondents demurred to the cross-complaint, contending they had no duty toward appellants and that Mrs. Caidin as surviving spouse had sole authority оver disposition of decedent’s remains. (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 7100, 7102.) The trial court sustained respondents’ demurrer without leave to amend.
We affirm. The surviving spouse had sole authority over disposition of the remains. Appellants had no legal right to an autopsy for civil discovery purposes. Respondents owed no duty to appellants to preserve “evidence,” because the law does not treat a human dead body as merely another form of physical evidence. 1
By statute the surviving spouse has the right to control disposition of a decedent’s remains. (See
Ross
v.
Forest Lawn Memorial Park
(1984)
“(a) The surviving spouse. . . .”
The person charged by law with the duty of interment is entitled to custody of the remains for the purpose of interment. (Health & Saf. Code, § 7102.) Cremation is an authorized disposition. (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 7009, 7010.) The person having the right to custody may, but is not required to, authorize an autopsy. (Health & Saf. Code, § 7113.) However, in cases where the coroner is required by law to investigate the cause of death, the coroner has a paramount right to custody, including the right to conduct an autopsy, until the conclusion of the autopsy or medical investigation by the coroner. (Health & Saf. Code, § 7102; Gov. Code, §§ 27491, 27491.4.)
There is no indication the coroner investigated the death involved in this case. Appellants sought an autopsy for the sole purpose of discovery of evidence in a civil action. Aрpellants had no legal right to have an autopsy conducted for this purpose. In
Holm
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
This case is therefore distinguishable from the California “spoliation of evidence” case on which appellants rely,
Smith
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Here appellants’ cross-complaint contains an extremely vague suggestion that respondent Drexler, as respondent Caidin’s attorney, promised an autopsy to аppellants’ attorney. Appellants did not rely to their detriment on such alleged agreement because, unlike the plaintiff in Smith, appellants could not have obtained a court order for discovery of this type.
Respondents owed no duty to preserve evidence, because the law recognizes a human corpse is not just another piece of physical evidence. In
People
v.
Vick
(1970)
In
People
v.
McNeill
(1980)
Appellants have even less interest in an autopsy than the criminal defendant in
McNeill
because appellants seek it merely for the purpose of civil discovery.
(Holm
v.
Superior Court, supra,
To allow the cаuse of action asserted by appellants would contravene the statutory scheme designating the persons having the right to dispose of human remains and the case law prohibiting court-ordered autopsies for civil disсovery purposes. To allow appellants’ action would treat a dead body merely as another piece of evidence, ignoring the outrage to the surviving family members, to which our case law is sensitive.
The trial court also opined that recognition of appellants’ cause of action could violate the surviving spouse’s freedom of religion. California law is also sensitive to this consideration. In
Sinai Temple
v.
Kaplan
(1976)
Because the surviving spouse’s decision is so intensely private and personal, it would be difficult to prove that сremation was done for the improper purpose of destroying evidence. Assuming, as we must on demurrer, that appellants could prove respondents had such motive,
The order of dismissal of the cross-complaint is affirmed.
Turner, P. J., and Boren, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellants inappropriately attempt to supplement the cross-complaint with factual assertions in their opening brief on appeal. According to these assertions, the specific аllegations against appellant Walsh involve his failure to earlier detect decedent’s cancer; decedent suffered not only from cancer but also from other conditions which may have caused or contributed to death; the death certificate attributing death to cancer was signed by a nontreating physician; prior to death decedent, represented by respondent Drexler, filed a medical malpractice аction; as decedent’s condition deteriorated, appellant’s attorney told
