C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B. v. KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIUDALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. BOSTER

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 2024
DocketED111188
StatusPublished

This text of C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B. v. KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIUDALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. BOSTER (C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B. v. KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIUDALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. BOSTER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B. v. KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIUDALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. BOSTER, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION TWO

C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND ) No. ED111188 THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B., ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Respondents, ) of St. Louis County ) vs. ) Honorable John N. Borbonus ) KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIDUALLY ) AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE ) OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. ) BOSTER, ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: January 16, 2024

Introduction

This appeal arises from a dispute over who is entitled to the cremated remains of Kaitlin

Boster (“Decedent”). Her three minor children, through their next friend, G.W.B., (collectively,

“Petitioners”) brought this declaratory judgment action alleging that the children were entitled to

Decedent’s remains and asserting that a health care power of attorney purporting to give

Decedent’s mother, Kendra Perpich, the right to control disposition of Decedent’s remains was

invalid, ineffective, or inapplicable. The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of

Petitioners and ordered the funeral home in possession of Decedent’s remains to deliver them to

Petitioners. The petition also alleged the children were entitled to the personal property of

Decedent that was in the funeral home’s possession. Perpich attempted to intervene in her capacity as the personal representative of Decedent’s estate in order to protect that property. In its

judgment, the trial court ordered the property to be delivered to the estate via the personal

representative. The trial court denied the motion to intervene.

Perpich appeals, claiming the trial court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of

Petitioners and in denying the motion to intervene. Because Petitioners did not demonstrate they

were entitled to judgment as a matter of law declaring the children’s right to Decedent’s remains,

we reverse and remand for further proceedings. We also conclude the intervention issue is moot

because there is no longer a justiciable controversy involving Decedent’s personal property.

Factual and Procedural Background Decedent died in January 2021 in Missouri. She was unmarried and was survived by her

parents and her three minor children. After her death, her father, G.W.B., had Decedent’s body

delivered to a funeral home for cremation. G.W.B. believed that Decedent’s children had the right

of sepulcher, meaning “the right to choose and control the burial, cremation, or other final

disposition of” Decedent’s body, pursuant to section 194.119.1.1 That statute prioritizes the

sepulcher rights of a decedent’s next-of-kin, but gives first priority to “[a]n attorney in fact

designated in a durable power of attorney wherein the deceased specifically granted the right of

sepulcher over his or her body to such attorney in fact.” Section 194.119.2(1). Surviving children

are further down the statute’s priority list. Section 194.119.2(4). Perpich asserted that she was

Decedent’s attorney in fact—and her rights trumped those of the children—because she was

granted the right of sepulcher by a durable health care power of attorney (“HCPA”) executed by

Decedent in July 2019 in Arizona.2

1 Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to RSMo (2016). 2 Although the parties dispute Decedent’s state of residence at other times, it is undisputed that she resided in Arizona in July 2019. There is also no dispute that the HCPA is durable.

2 The HCPA, which was explicitly made under section 36-3221 of the Arizona Revised

Statutes, designated Perpich as Decedent’s agent “for all matters relating to [her] health care,

including, without limitation, full power to give or refuse consent to all medical, surgical, hospital

and related health care, including the provision of life-sustaining treatment and artificially

administered food and fluids.” The HCPA provided that the power of attorney was effective upon

Decedent’s “inability to make or communicate health care decisions.” It also granted Perpich the

authority to carry out Decedent’s funeral and burial disposition wishes—specifically, that her body

be cremated and her remains put into the ocean—“in accordance with this power of attorney, which

is effective upon my death.” The HCPA was signed by “Kaitlin Boster” and also contained the

signature of a witness who stated he was “present when Kaitlin Boster signed” the HCPA and that

she appeared at that time to be of sound mind and under no duress.

The funeral home cremated Decedent’s remains in March 2021. Petitioners then filed this

lawsuit, naming the funeral home and Perpich as defendants and seeking a declaration of the

parties’ rights. The petition challenged the validity of the HCPA, alleging that Decedent’s

signature was “spurious” and asserting that the HCPA contained “questionable items”—

specifically, that the state abbreviation for Perpich’s address was incorrect, there was no street

address for Decedent, and the witness’s address was inconsistent with the address listed in

Decedent’s will, which he also witnessed the same day. Petitioners further alleged that the HCPA

never became effective because, prior to her death, Decedent was not unable to make or

communicate health care decisions. Petitioners sought a judgment ordering the funeral home to

deliver to the children Decedent’s remains and her personal property in its possession.

Petitioners filed a motion for summary judgment. They contended that, “assuming

arguendo” that the HCPA was valid, it never became effective and, even if it was valid and

3 effective, the HCPA was created pursuant to an Arizona statute that applied only to Arizona funeral

homes with regard to cremation. After the summary judgment record was complete, the trial court

entered an order granting the motion for summary judgment without explanation. Perpich filed a

motion to vacate or modify that order, claiming that it was wrongly decided and also that it lacked

a necessary party, namely Perpich in her capacity as the personal representative of Decedent’s

estate.3 Perpich contemporaneously filed a motion to intervene in that capacity as a matter of right

pursuant to Rule 52.12(a),4 alleging that the personal representative had an interest in protecting

the property of the estate that was the subject of the litigation and in having the HCPA declared

valid. Following a hearing, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Petitioners and

ordered the funeral home to deliver Decedent’s remains to the children via their next friend. The

judgment also ordered the funeral home to deliver Decedent’s personal property to “the estate of

the decedent via its personal representative.” In a separate order and judgment entered a few weeks

later, the trial court denied Perpich’s motion to vacate or modify and her motion to intervene. This

appeal follows.

Discussion

Point I – Summary Judgment as to the Disposition of Decedent’s Remains

In her first point on appeal, Perpich challenges the trial court’s entry of summary judgment

in favor of Petitioners, asserting that they failed to show they were entitled to judgment as a matter

of law as to the disposition of Decedent’s remains because the HCPA granted Perpich the authority

to carry out Decedent’s wish that her remains be put into the ocean. Perpich also contends that,

3 Perpich was designated as the personal representative of Decedent’s estate in the will executed in Arizona on the same date as the HCPA. There is no challenge in this case to the validity of the will.

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C.A.B., JR., S.C.B., AND S.M.S. BY AND THROUGH THEIR NEXT FRIEND G.W.B. v. KENDRA PERPICH, INDIVIUDALLY AND AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF KAITLIN N. BOSTER, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cab-jr-scb-and-sms-by-and-through-their-next-friend-gwb-v-moctapp-2024.