46 Wash. 16 | Wash. | 1907
The respondents brought this action to recover damages against appellants for the improper burial of a deceased child. They recovered a verdict and judgment for $2,510. From this judgment the defendants appealed.
The complaint alleged,, in substance, that the plaintiffs were husband and wife; that the defendant's were copartners doing business as undertakers in the city of Aberdeen; that on December 12, 1905, plaintiffs lost their infant child, and contracted with defendants to bury the body in a decent, respectable manner, according to the usual customs and usage in performing burials; that in pursuance of the agreement, defendants took the said body and deposited it in a grave which was then used as the grave of another, child, and left the body in a rough coffin without a box and within six inches of the surface of the ground, and on top of the coffin of another child; that after said pretended burial, and without knowledge of the manner of said burial, plaintiffs paid defendants the charges therefor; that, by reason of the failure of defendants to perform their duties under said contract,
It is fii’st coxxtended by appellants that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, but in view of the allegations iix the complaint and the admissioxxs in the answer, that the plaixxtiffs are husband and wife and that the defendants are copartners, there seems to be no merit in this contention. The persoxxs who'are the lawful custodians of a deceased body may maintain aix action for its desecration. Dunn & Co. v. Smith
The questions whether the complaint states a cause of action, whether the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury, and whether the court erred in instructing the jury that damages might be given for mental anguish of the plaintiffs, are all based upon the same contention, viz., that the action is for damages for a breach of contract, and that mental anguish is not a proper element of damage in such cases. These questions may therefore all be considered together. While it is true that the complaint alleges that a contract was entered into and that by reason of the failure of defendants to perform their duty under the. contract plaintiffs have been damaged, etc., still the facts stated in the complaint, and testified to by the plaintiffs, show that the action is for a wrong against the feelings of the plaintiffs inflicted by a wrongful and improper burial of their dead; in other words, a tort or injury against the person. In cases of this character, the rule has frequently been applied that damages may be had for mental suffering. Dunn v. Smith, and Koerber v. Patek, supra; Larson v. Chase, 47 Minn. 307, 50 N. W. 238, 28 Am. St. 370, 14 L. R. A. 85; Burney v. Children’s Hospital, 169 Mass. 57, 47 N. E. 401, 61 Am. St. 273, 38 L. R. A. 413; Foley v. Phelps, 1 App. Div. 551, 37 N. Y. Supp. 471.
In the case of Koerber v. Patek, supra, the court said:
“Doubtless other illustrations might be suggested, but these suffice to satisfy us that there is neither solecism nor unreason in the view that the right of custody of the corpse of a near relative for the purpose of paying the last rites of respect and regard is one of those relative rights recognized by the law as springing from the domestic relation, and that a wilful or wrongful invasion of that right is one of those torts for which damages for injury to feelings are recoverable as an independent element.”
“Wherever the act complained of constitutes a violation of some legal right of the plaintiff, which always, in contemplation of the law, causes injury, he is entitled to recover all damages which are the proximate and natural consequence of the wrongful act. That mental suffering and injury to the feelings would be ordinarily the natural and proximate result of knowledge that the remains of a deceased husband had been mutilated is too plain to admit of argument.”
It is true that the cases above quoted from are cases where the deceased body had been wrongfully mutilated, but the principle there discussed applies as well to a case such as the one at bar where the wrong consists of the manner of burial. Dunn v. Smith, supra. Where one person agrees to give a dead body decent burial, and under such agreement obtains possession of the body and in violation of his duty casts the body by the way, or wrongfully mutilates it, or disposes of it, or deposits it in a grave without covering, in such a manner as to cause the relatives or persons charged with its decent sepulture to naturally suffer mental anguish, it would shock the sensibilities to hold that there was no remedy for such a wrong. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the trial court did not commit error in overruling the demurrer, or in denying defendants’ motion for a nonsuit, or in instructing the jury that plaintiffs were entitled to recover actual damages for injury to the feelings.
Appellants next contend that the court erred in refusing the motion for new trial. This motion was based upon several grounds which, in all probability, will not arise' upon a new trial, and which we shall not therefore discuss. We are clear that this motion should have been sustained, upon the ground that the verdict was excessive, so much so as to show passion and prejudice on the part of the jury. The facts, as stated by the respondents and which we assume are true for the purposes of this appeal, are in substance as follows: On December 7, 1905, the respondent Mrs. Wright gave birth to a child at a hospital in the city of Aberdeen. The child died
Thereafter on May 6, 1905, the parents desired .to remove the body of the child, and went to the office of appellants and informed Mr. C. A. Beardsley that they desired to see the grave. Mr. Beardsley was not well on that day and could not go to the cemetery with respondents, but directed them how they could find the grave. Respondents went to the cemetery, but were unable to locate the grave. They thereupon returned to Mr. Beardsley and told him that they could not find the grave, that they would be back the next Wednesday, and that if he did not then show them where the grave was an officer would be called. They returned on the next -Tuesday, and requested Mr. Beardsley to accompany them to the cemetery. Mr. Beardsley agreed to go, but requested respondents to furnish a conveyance. Respondents refused to do this, but proceeded to walk to the cemetery, the distance being about one and a half miles. Mr. Beardsley immediately thereafter obtained a conveyance and arrived at the cemetery a short time ahead of respondents. He showed them the grave. Mr. Wright thereupon proceeded to exhume the body. He found the coffin buried only about eight inches below the surface of the ground, without any
The evidence showed that Mrs. Wright wept bitterly both at the time of her first visit to the cemetery when she was unable to find the grave, and at the time when the body was exhumed. She testified that her grief was caused by reason of the shallow depth the body was buried, and because the coffin was not placed in a box. There is no evidence that the body had been molested or mutilated in any way. Under these facts, we are satisfied that a verdict for $2,510 is entirely out of proportion to the actual injury sustained. It is somewhere between five and ten times more than it ought to be, and indicates that the jury, for some reason — no doubt in part by the mother’s tears, were induced by passion or prejudice to render a verdict in the nature of punitive damages against the appellants.
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Hadley, C. J., Chow, Root, Dunbar, and Fullerton,JJ., concur.