Carey B. Boals, Jr. v. Stephen Murphy d/b/a Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 2013
DocketW2013-00310-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carey B. Boals, Jr. v. Stephen Murphy d/b/a Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service (Carey B. Boals, Jr. v. Stephen Murphy d/b/a Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey B. Boals, Jr. v. Stephen Murphy d/b/a Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON August 22, 2013 Session

CAREY B. BOALS, JR., AND KIM HICKERSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NEXT OF KIN OF JUDY MARLENE BOALS, DECEASED v. STEPHEN MURPHY D/B/A MEDINA FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATION SERVICE; MURPHY UNDERTAKING, INC.; MURPHY ENTERPRISES UNLIMITED, INC.; STEPHEN MURPHY AND JEFF MURPHY D/B/A MUSIC CITY CREMATORY SERVICE, LLC; ALPHA MORTUARY SERVICE, LLC; JOHN HARRIS D/B/A CHAPEL HILL CREMATORY; AND CREMATIONS, INC., D/B/A CHAPEL HILL CREMATORY

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Gibson County No. H 3804 Clayburn Peeples, Judge

No. W2013-00310-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 30, 2013

This is a lawsuit alleging unauthorized cremation. The plaintiffs’ mother, a Tennessee resident, died in Arkansas while visiting a friend. The plaintiffs hired a Tennessee funeral home to transport the decedent’s body back to her hometown of Medina, Tennessee, for an informal family viewing. The plaintiffs instructed the Tennessee funeral home operator that, after the viewing, the decedent’s body was to be taken to Nashville, Tennessee, to be cremated there. The Tennessee funeral home retained the defendant Arkansas funeral home to handle the matter. The Arkansas funeral home delivered the body to an Arkansas crematory. The plaintiffs’ mother’s body was cremated by the crematory in Arkansas, so the plaintiffs were deprived of the opportunity to view their mother’s deceased body in Tennessee. The plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against several defendants, alleging various causes of action arising out of the unauthorized cremation of their mother’s body in Arkansas. The defendant Arkansas funeral home filed a motion for summary judgment as to all counts of the complaint. The trial court granted summary judgment to the Arkansas funeral home on all counts and certified the order as final under Tenn. R. Civ. Proc. 54.02. The plaintiffs now appeal. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the case for further proceedings. Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Todd D. Siroky, Jackson, Tennessee, for the Plaintiff/Appellants Carey B. Boals, Jr., and Kim Hickerson, individually and as next of kin of Judy Marlene Boals, deceased

Lori D. Parish, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Defendant/Appellee Alpha Mortuary Service, LLC

OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

On October 6, 2009, Judy Marlene Boals (“Ms. Boals”), 60 years old, traveled from her hometown in Medina, Tennessee, to Little Rock, Arkansas, to visit a friend who was a patient at a Little Rock hospital. Suddenly and unexpectedly, Ms. Boals died during the hospital visit under suspicious circumstances. Hospital personnel reported that they found a third person in the room with Ms. Boals’ deceased body with the door closed; the person was rummaging through Ms. Boals’ purse and personal belongings and refused to open the door for hospital personnel. The suspect was arrested and held on felony theft charges. Little Rock police opened a homicide investigation of Ms. Boals’ death. As part of the investigation, Little Rock authorities sent Ms. Boals’ body to the coroner for an autopsy.

Little Rock police contacted Ms. Boals’ children, Plaintiff/Appellants Carey B. Boals, Jr., and Kim Hickerson (“Mr. Boals” and “Ms. Hickerson,” collectively referred to as “Plaintiffs”), and told them that their mother had died. At the time, Mr. Boals lived in Alabama, and Ms. Hickerson lived in or near Ms. Boals’ hometown, Medina, Tennessee.

Upon hearing the news of Ms. Boals’ death, Mr. Boals began making arrangements for transportation of Ms. Boals’ body from Little Rock, Arkansas, to Medina, Tennessee. To this end, he contacted Defendant Stephen Murphy, whom he knew. Mr. Murphy owns and operates Defendant Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service (“Medina Funeral Home”) in Medina. Mr. Boals asked Mr. Murphy to have Ms. Boals’ body transported to Medina so that the family could have an informal viewing of the body there, and after the Medina viewing transport the body to Nashville, Tennessee. Mr. Boals told Mr. Murphy that the family wanted the body cremated in Nashville at the Music City Crematory Service (“Music

-2- City Crematory”), owned by Mr. Murphy and his brother, Defendant Jeff Murphy. Mr. Murphy and Mr. Boals had a series of conversations about these arrangements.

Because Mr. Boals lived in Alabama, on October 6, 2009, his sister Ms. Hickerson went to see Mr. Murphy at the Medina Funeral Home to confirm the arrangements. Mr. Murphy told Ms. Hickerson that he would have Ms. Boals’ body transported from Arkansas to Medina, Tennessee, and that the family would have an opportunity to view the body when it was brought to Medina. After the family viewing in Medina, Mr. Murphy told Ms. Hickerson, he would have Ms. Boals’ body transported to Nashville for cremation at Music City Crematory. Mr. Murphy told Ms. Hickerson that, in light of his relationship with Mr. Boals, he would waive the charges for transportation of the body.

In reliance on Mr. Murphy’s representations, Ms. Hickerson signed a release stating that Ms. Hickerson and Mr. Boals released Ms. Boals’ body to “Medina Funeral Home and Alpha Mortuary Service.” Mr. Boals’ signature was also on the release.1 Defendant/Appellee Alpha Mortuary Service, LLC (“Alpha”), is a funeral home located in Little Rock, Arkansas, owned by William Newsome; the record does not indicate whether there is a relationship between Medina Funeral Home and Alpha Mortuary Service. Ms. Hickerson also signed a document entitled “Statement of Funeral Goods and Services Selected,” which was an invoice containing Medina Funeral Home’s charges for the cremation of Ms. Boals’ body. Neither of these forms directly authorized the cremation of Ms. Boals’ body; Ms. Hickerson and Mr. Boals assert that neither of them signed any document authorizing the cremation of Ms. Boals’ body.

Contrary to Mr. Murphy’s assurances that he would personally see to it that Ms. Boals’ body was brought back to the family’s home in Medina, Mr. Murphy contacted Mr. Newsome at Alpha for assistance. Mr. Murphy faxed Mr. Newsome the release signed by the Plaintiffs. The Plaintiffs allege that Mr. Murphy also sent Alpha a cremation authorization form containing the forged signatures of Mr. Boals and Ms. Hickerson. When it was sent, the cremation authorization form Mr. Murphy sent to Mr. Newsome did not include Defendant Chapel Hill Crematory as an authorized crematory; at some point, Mr. Newsome inserted Chapel Hill Crematory’s name next to Alpha’s as authorized to cremate Ms. Boals’ body.2

1 It is unclear whether Ms. Hickerson signed Mr. Boals’ name on his behalf, or whether Mr. Boals’ signature was procured through fax transmission or otherwise. The parties do not dispute, however, that the release contained the signatures of both Ms. Hickerson and Mr. Boals, and that it was duly authorized by both of the Plaintiffs. 2 Some evidence indicates that Mr. Newsome, Alpha’s owner, inserted “Chapel Hill Crematory” on the document after this lawsuit was filed, making it appear as though Chapel Hill Crematory was the authorized (continued...)

-3- On October 7, 2009, the Arkansas State Crime Lab completed the autopsy on Ms. Boals’ body. Based on the autopsy, the Chief Medical Examiner ruled preliminarily that the manner of Ms. Boals’ death was undetermined, pending results of toxicology tests and the pending homicide investigation.

The day the autopsy was completed, Mr. Newsome presented the signed release to the Arkansas State Crime Lab, so the Crime Lab released Ms. Boals’ body to him. Mr.

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Carey B. Boals, Jr. v. Stephen Murphy d/b/a Medina Funeral Home and Cremation Service, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-b-boals-jr-v-stephen-murphy-dba-medina-funeral-home-and-tennctapp-2013.