Byrd v. Cason

298 P.2d 301, 179 Kan. 753, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 9, 1956
Docket40,027, 40,028
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 298 P.2d 301 (Byrd v. Cason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrd v. Cason, 298 P.2d 301, 179 Kan. 753, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 308 (kan 1956).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, C. J.:

These were two actions to enjoin defendants, members of the state board of embalming from making effective an order of the board revoking the plaintiff’s license to practice embalming. Judgment was for the plaintiff. Defendants have appealed.

Plaintiffs in the two cases are brothers and owners of the ByrdSnodgrass Funeral Home, Inc., in Wichita. There was an action by each brother. Except for the plaintiff the cases were identical. They were consolidated in the court below and here the facts in the case brought by C. M. Byrd will be stated.

After stating the residence and business of plaintiff, the petition alleged the official capacity of defendants; that the board issued to plaintiff a funeral director’s license; that about August 5, 1954, the funeral home issued to law enforcement officials and members of the fire department ‘and Sedgwick county and state *754 police officers a covenant, a copy of which was attached to the petition, whereby the funeral home as a gesture of appreciation agreed to provide any person to whom a covenant was issued a $1,000 funeral in event the holder lost his life by accidental means while in the performance of his duty; that plaintiff received a notice from defendants, a copy of which was attached; that pursuant to such notice plaintiff appeared before the board on December 7, 1954, at which time a hearing was held; that thereafter he received a letter from the board on February 1, 1955, purporting to revoke the license of plaintiff to become effective at the close of business on February 29, 1955, and to remain in effect until June 30, 1955; that defendants had made an abortive attempt to preclude the plaintiff from taking any legal action to set aside the order of revocation by threatening plaintiff that unless he adhered to the order his license would not be renewed on July 1, 1955'.

The petition then alleged that the order promulgated by the board was unreasonable, arbitrary, oppressive and discriminatory in that the issuing of the covenant in question was not a violation of G. S. 1949, 65-1722, subsection (Z), as a matter of law; that by issuing it plaintiff did not violate that section; that defendants had placed an arbitrary, unreasonable, improper and unlawful interpretation upon the section; that the board had failed to define the acts of plaintiff, which would violate the section; that in the hearing before the board no evidence was introduced showing that the plaintiff issued the covenant in question for the purpose of securing business and no evidence that it did or would secure business as a result of issuing it; that the covenants were not a thing of value until acted upon by the recipient and the action of the defendants in revoking plaintiff’s license was an abuse of discretion, unwarranted, unlawful, arbitrary, capricious and oppressive; that G. S. 1949, 65-1722 (Z) did not prevent the assumption by a funeral director of a reasonable responsibility for his community’s social and public needs; that the failure of the board to define such participation in public and charitable activities as to them was a violation of G. S. 1949, 65-1722 (Z), was discriminatory, arbitrary, oppressive, capricious and an abuse of administrative discretion; that plaintiff would suffer irreparable damage if his license should be revoked and if the order should go into effect he would lose valuable rights without due process of law, in violation of Section 18 of the Kansas Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth *755 Amendment to the Constitution of The United States; that Chapter 65, Article 17, of the Statutes of Kansas made no provision for an appeal from an order such as issued here; and plaintiff had no adequate remedy at law.

The prayer was that defendants be enjoined from making effective the order revoking plaintiffs license; that pending a final adjudication they be enjoined from making such order effective and that upon trial of the case the court determine that the order was unlawfully made and void.

The notice, to which reference was made in the petition, informed the plaintiff herein of the filing of the charge and notified him to appear before the board. Exhibit “C”, to which reference was made, found that plaintiff in concert with his brother had issued the bond in question to the persons named; that it was a thing of value given gratuitously to such persons for the purpose of securing of funeral business in contravention of G. S. 1949, 65-1722 (h) and (Z).

The order was that plaintiff's license was revoked, such revocation to become effective at the close of business on February 28, 1955, for the balance of the current license year, ending June 30, 1955.

In their answer defendants admitted the identity of the parties, the sending of the notice and the hearing and denied certain conclusions pleaded. For further answer defendants alleged the issuance of the bond; that plaintiff made statements to a newspaper reporter elaborating on the plan, that the board found that the furnishing of the bond was in the nature of an advertising scheme for the sole purpose of securing business, contrary to G. S. 1949, 65-1722 (Z); that the board ordered its secretary not to accept renewal fees for the year commencing July 1, 1955, because it anticipated that plaintiff might attempt to avoid the effect of the order by litigation; that the revocation was reasonable and proper and made pursuant to finding of facts supported by competent evidence; that defendants had no duty to define specific acts admitted by defendants as being prescribed by G. S. 1949, 65-1722 (Z); that plaintiff was estopped to deny that the bonds furnished were things of value; that the giving of the covenants was not a participation in a charitable activity but the giving was a direct gratuity to private persons; and that plaintiff would not be deprived of his license without due process of law since he had a notice and hearing.

*756 The prayer of the answer was that plaintiff be denied his injunction and that the court make an order resetting the effective date of the order revoking plaintiff’s license and for such other and further relief as the court might deem proper.

At the trial it was stipulated that the evidence in the trial court should be a transcript of the evidence before the board. The trial court held the issuance of the covenants could not be held to be the furnishing of free services or the loaning of merchandise or equipment at the time of illness for the purpose of inducing future patronage nor paying directly or indirectly any money or thing of value as a commission or gratuity for the securing of business and that the order of February 12, 1955, was unreasonable, arbitrary and unlawful. The defendants were enjoined from revoking plaintiffs’ licenses and from refusing to reissue their licenses for the reasons set out. The appeal is from that order.

The specifications of error were that the trial court erred in finding that plaintiff did not violate G. S. 1953 Supp., 65-1722 (h) and (l); in ruling that the order of the board dated February 1, 1955, was unreasonable, arbitrary and unlawful; and in enjoining the order.

The bond or covenant to which so much reference was made in the pleadings was denominated a covenant on its face.

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Related

Marks v. Frantz
325 P.2d 368 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 P.2d 301, 179 Kan. 753, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-cason-kan-1956.