REQUESTED BY: Jerry McDole, Webster County Attorney, Red Cloud, Nebraska Do counties have a mandatory duty to care for and maintain abandoned cemeteries?
No.
You have asked whether a county has a duty to care for and maintain abandoned cemeteries. Neb.Rev.Stat. §
The county board may expend money from the general fund of the county for the care and maintenance of each abandoned and neglected cemetery and Indian burial ground as follows: (1) Not to exceed three hundred fifty dollars in any one year when the cemetery is totally abandoned; or (2) not to exceed three hundred dollars in any one year when the cemetery is partially abandoned. Such care and maintenance may include the repair or building of fences and annual spraying for the control of weeds and brush.
Our first inquiry is what constitutes an abandoned cemetery. There are no Nebraska cases which define this phrase for us. A cemetery is, of course, recognized as a place or area set apart for the interment of the dead. In statutory construction the meaning of common words are to be taken in their ordinary significance in the absence of an indication of a contrary intent. Section
Our next inquiry is the extent of the obligation of a county to maintain a cemetery determined to be abandoned. Again, the pertinent section states, `the county board may expend money.' (Emphasis added.) Perhaps some legislative history will reinforce the otherwise apparent answer to this inquiry.
Prior to 1973, Neb.Rev.Stat. §
There does seem to be a problem in the opening words of this
23-313 , when petitioned by twenty-five freeholders of the county. Now here may present some problems in the carrying out of this statute. It may be difficult to find twenty-five people that would be close enough to it to want to sign a petition.
Minutes of Hearing, Committee on Government, Military, and Veterans Affairs, February 8, 1973. There is no testimony to indicate that the intent of the Legislature was to impose a mandatory duty on the counties to maintain all abandoned cemeteries. The manifest intent of the Legislature expressed above does not show a clear and unmistakable desire to change existing law. The apparent intent was to make it easier for a county to implement its discretionary power to maintain abandoned cemeteries.
Furthermore, as an aid to the construction and operation of statutory language, the Legislature guides us by the provisions of Neb.Rev.Stat. §
In conclusion, it is our opinion that the statutory power of the county board to expend money from the general fund of the county for the care and maintenance of abandoned cemeteries, as herein defined, is discretionary and is not mandatory.
Very truly yours, PAUL L. DOUGLAS Attorney General Mel Kammerlohr Assistant Attorney General APPROVED:Paul L. Douglas Attorney General
