Summary
In Puckey v. Blake, 306 Pa. 374, 160 A. 222, the deceased wife, at her request and with the consent of her husband, had been buried beside her father, and an infant son, who died later, had also been buried beside the deceased mother.
Summary of this case from Bradley v. BurgisOpinion
January 25, 1932.
March 14, 1932.
Burial of the dead — Husband's rights as to burial place of wife — Wife's dying wish — Removal of body — Equity.
1. The paramount right in the disposition of the body of one deceased is, under ordinary circumstances, in a surviving spouse, but this right is not unbending and is subject to modification under special circumstances. [375-376]
2. A bill in equity to secure the removal of the bodies of plaintiff's first wife and their infant son from a cemetery lot owned by the wife's family to a lot purchased by plaintiff in another cemetery, adjacent to a lot owned by a second wife, will be dismissed, where it appears that the deceased wife's original interment beside her father was in accordance with her dying expressed wish, and with plaintiff's consent, and that plaintiff has free access to her grave. [375-376]
Before FRAZER, C. J., SIMPSON, KEPHART, SCHAFFER, MAXEY and DREW, JJ.
Appeal, No. 33, Jan. T., 1932, by plaintiff, from decree of C. P. Lackawanna Co., Jan. T., 1931, No. 1, dismissing bill in equity, in case of Walter Puckey v. George Blake, Theodore Blake, Charles Beck, N. P. Kinback, Valley View Cemetery Association. Affirmed.
Bill for injunction. Before LEACH, J.
The opinion of the Supreme Court states the facts.
Bill dismissed. Plaintiff appealed. Error assigned, inter alia, was decree, quoting record.
H. D. Carey, for appellant.
F. P. Badger, for appellees.
Argued January 25, 1932.
This bill was brought by plaintiff to secure removal of the remains of his first wife, Sylvia Blake Puckey, and their infant son, from a cemetery lot owned by the wife's family to a lot purchased by the plaintiff in another cemetery.
The facts found by the chancellor show that, in 1920 Sylvia Blake Puckey died in childbirth, at her mother's home, within a year after her marriage to Walter Puckey, the plaintiff, and was buried in the Shady Side Cemetery at Jermyn, at her request and with the consent of her husband, beside her father, who had died a short time previous to her death. The child died some months later and was buried, also with plaintiff's consent, beside its mother. Later, plaintiff married again. Ten years after the death and burial of his first wife, coal mining operations beneath the Shady Side Cemetery, where she was interred, made it necessary to remove all bodies in that cemetery to other land, not underlaid with coal, purchased by the cemetery association and known as the Valley View Cemetery. Two of defendants, George Blake and Theodore Blake, brothers of the first Mrs. Puckey, without consulting plaintiff, removed the remains of his first wife and their infant son, together with those of her father, mother and sister to the new Valley View Cemetery. Plaintiff now seeks to have the bodies of his wife and son moved from the latter cemetery to a lot in another cemetery, adjacent to a lot owned by his second wife, in which her first husband is buried. The Blake family opposes such a removal.
Keeping in mind the rule that the paramount right in the disposition of remains of a deceased husband or wife is, under ordinary circumstances, in a surviving spouse, it must be remembered however, the rule is not unbending but subject to modification under special circumstances (Pettigrew v. Pettigrew, 207 Pa. 313, 317-19; Moore v. Sheafer, 282 Pa. 360, 361). Here, the deceased wife's original interment beside her father was in accordance with her dying expressed wish and with plaintiff's consent, and the unavoidable reinterment was made in a similar location among her own family. Plaintiff having remarried in the meantime, the court below decided that "equity should not interfere" to require removal of the remains of Mrs. Puckey and her infant son from their present resting place, to which plaintiff has free access. The case was peculiarly one for the discretion of the court below, and we find no abuse thereof in the decision of the chancellor and of the court in banc.
The decree is affirmed at cost of plaintiff.