Bean v. Department of State, State Board of Funeral Directors

855 A.2d 148, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 553
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 855 A.2d 148 (Bean v. Department of State, State Board of Funeral Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bean v. Department of State, State Board of Funeral Directors, 855 A.2d 148, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 553 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION BY

Judge PELLEGRINI.

Kevin M. Bean (Bean), a licensed funeral director, appeals from a decision and order of the Department of State, State Board of Funeral Directors (Board) that irrevocable pre-need agreements are subject to rescission at the request of a customer who has previously agreed to the terms of that agreement and are transferable to another funeral director.

At issue in this case are two pre-paid burial contracts or “pre-need agreement” forms as they are referred to herein which are used by Bean in his business. They allow a customer to purchase merchandise, services or other benefits that are rendered at the time of death. Both forms have been approved by the Board as required by the Board’s regulations at 34 Pa.Code § 13.224 which provide that “prepaid burial contracts or preneed contracts to be used by a funeral director shall be reviewed and approved by the Board ...” One form clearly states that it is irrevocable and only allows the customer of Bean’s services to cancel the transaction within three business days of signing the agreement. The other form, which was endorsed by SecurChoice, an affiliate of the Pennsylvania Funeral Directors Association, not only allows for the three-business day cancellation, but also gives the customer of Bean’s services the option to revoke the agreement by checking a specified box marked “revocable.”1 If that box is checked, then the agreement may be terminated by either the buyer or the funeral home at any time prior to the customer’s death. This does not mean that the customer can revoke the nature of the contract, i.e., the funeral or burial services, but he or she may transfer the services for another funeral director to carry out upon his or her death. If the “irrevocable” box is checked, the agreement cannot be termi[150]*150nated unless done so within the first three days after signing.

In 2002, Bean received a demand from a customer who wanted money returned that had been paid pursuant to an irrevocable agreement. Bean was aware of communications between the Board and a state representative regarding the licensing of another funeral director, the gist of the communications being that the Board believed that all pre-need funds belonged to the customer and not to the funeral director.2 As a result of his dispute with the customer and the communications between the Board and the state representative, on January 10, 2008, Bean filed a petition for review in the nature of a declaratory judgment 3 action in this Court’s original jurisdiction seeking a declaration that the Board could not interfere and direct that irrevocable pre-need agreements were subject to rescission at the request of the customer who had agreed to the terms of the agreement. In response, the Board filed preliminary objections alleging that this Court did not have original jurisdiction and that the case was not ripe for review as there was no case or controversy.

Because we had jurisdiction over the declaratory judgment action but believed that this was an area within the Board’s expertise, with the agreement of the parties, we invoked the doctrine of primary jurisdiction and referred the primary legal question involved to the Board. As part of that order, we directed the Board to hold an administrative hearing for the purpose of addressing whether a customer could rescind an irrevocable preneed agreement and to issue an adjudication within 30 days. More specifically, the order required the Board to address:

Whether, under the current law, a pre-need customer may, for any reason, rescind an irrevocable pre-need agreement and demand the funeral director to forward the entire principal and the earnings to date to a subsequent funeral director for a pre-need contract with the subsequent director, even if the initial pre-need contract expressly provides that it shall be irrevocable and non-cancelable except for the three-day right-of-rescission provided for under the Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, 73 P.S. § 201-7?

[151]*151The Board held a timely hearing on the matter. Then, relying on Section 13(c) of the Funeral Director Law, 63 P.S. § 479.13(c), and its regulations found at 49 Pa.Code §§ 13.224(a) and 13.226, the Board concluded that a customer could rescind an irrevocable pre-need agreement reasoning that because a funeral director who entered into a pre-need contract with a customer and received funds in advance acted as a fiduciary or a trustee of the funds received, the funds remained the property of the consumer until the services were provided. It also reasoned that neither the Funeral Director Law nor the Board’s regulations prohibited the transfer of those funds to another funeral director by the customer to provide those services. Bean then filed a petition for review with this Court appealing that determination and arguing that the Board erred in holding that a customer could rescind an irrevocable pre-need agreement. The Board, reneging on the agreement and representation it made to the Court, maintained that there was no controversy and this Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the matter. This appeal by Bean followed.4

I.

Initially, we must address the Board’s position that our order referring the matter to the Board was in error because no actual controversy existed, and the doctrine of primary jurisdiction remanding the matter to the Board for consideration was improperly invoked.

This matter originally came before the Court as a request for declaratory action5 in which Bean alleged that there was a controversy because the Board had indicated to a state representative that the pre-need agreements were rescindable, and because Bean had been contacted by a client to rescind an irrevocable pre-need agreement which he believed was irrevocable under the contract which the Board had previously approved. Preliminary objections were filed and the Board agreed to an order by this Court that the matter be referred to the Board, which, by doing so, essentially conceded that there was a controversy to be resolved. By acquiescing to this Court’s order to hold a hearing on the issue of the revocability of the preneed agreement rather than appealing that order, the Board agreed that there was a controversy and waived the argument it now makes. Not only did the Board waive that argument, but by its letter to the state representative indicating that the irrevocable pre-need agreements were rescindable, it created doubt in an area that it was charged to administer, and neither funeral directors nor customers know how to conduct their affairs. All of this is confirmed by the adjudication it issued under the consent order.6

[152]*152As to the Board’s argument that we improperly invoked the doctrine of “primary jurisdiction,” “primary jurisdiction” is a judicially created doctrine that allows courts to make a workable allocation of business between themselves and agencies responsible for the regulation of certain industries, and arises where the original jurisdiction of the court is being invoked to decide the merits of the controversy. Rather than exercising its own jurisdiction, the Court declines jurisdiction because it is proper to defer to the administrative agency’s jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
855 A.2d 148, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-department-of-state-state-board-of-funeral-directors-pacommwct-2004.