Carsey v. Alexander Cemetery, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 2001
DocketCase No. 00CA028.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Carsey v. Alexander Cemetery, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2001) (Carsey v. Alexander Cemetery, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carsey v. Alexander Cemetery, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY This is an appeal from an Athens County Common Pleas Court summary judgment entered in favor of Alexander Cemetery, Inc., defendant below and appellee herein.

Harry Carsey, Sue Carsey, Jon Carsey, Amber Carsey, Rose Carsey, and Lawrence Carsey, plaintiffs below and appellants herein, raise the following assignment of error for review:

"PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS ASSERT AS THEIR SOLE ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR THE GRANTING OF SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF DEFENDANT-APPELLANT ON THE SEVEN LIABILITY THEORIES ASSERTED AGAINST ALEXANDER CEMETERY, INC."

In 1903, William W. Carsey purchased Lot 68, Fraction 1 at Alexander Cemetery. On November 8, 1946, William was buried in the lot that he purchased.

On April 7, 1986, Lewis Carsey passed away. Lewis was married to Mary and was (1) the father of Harry, Rose, and Lawrence, (2) the grandfather of Jon and Amber, and (3) the father-in-law of Sue. The family wished to bury Lewis in the Carsey family plot at the Alexander Cemetery (appellee).

Appellee's sexton, Max Ellis, began to prepare Lewis's burial site. Ellis examined the Carsey family plot and determined that it was fully occupied. Ellis nevertheless began to dig a grave for Lewis within the Carsey plot. Upon digging the grave, Ellis hit "an old wooden box," which led him to believe that someone was already buried in that location.

Ellis claimed that he informed Harry Carsey that Ellis believed Lewis's intended grave site was occupied and that Harry nonetheless told Ellis to proceed with preparing the site for Lewis's burial. Harry denied that Ellis informed him, prior to Lewis's burial, that a body was already buried in that location. Lewis ultimately was buried within the Carsey family plot in the spot Ellis believed to contain another body.

On June 13, 1996, Mary Carsey, Lewis's wife, passed away. The Carsey children wished for their mother and father to be buried next to one another. Upon hearing of Mary's death and the family's desire to bury her next to Lewis, Ellis informed appellee that the Carsey plot was full and that burying Mary next to Lewis was not possible. Ellis also explained to the appellee that he believed Lewis had been buried on top of another person. Appellee advised the Carsey family of the situation and informed the family that the sexton believed that Lewis had been buried in a previously occupied grave.

Although appellee would not permit Mary to be buried immediately next to Lewis, appellee did offer to provide a burial location for Mary within a close distance to her husband. The space was located near a pathway and was located in a section of the cemetery that previously had not been used for burial purposes. Appellants agreed to bury Mary in the offered spot and requested appellee to disinter Lewis and to re-inter him next to Mary. Appellee agreed to permit appellants to disinter and re-inter Lewis. Appellee refused, however, to pay for the expense of moving Lewis's grave site.

During the disinterment, Harry requested the grave diggers to probe his father's former burial site to determine whether someone else had been buried in that location. After probing the grave site, the grave digger informed Harry that he did not think anyone had been buried there.

On January 24, 1997, appellants filed a complaint against appellee. Appellants asserted several causes of action arising out of: (1) the burial of Lewis in a grave alleged to be occupied by another body; (2) the inability of appellee to bury Mary next to her husband; and (3) Mary's burial in an alleged roadway. The causes of action included: (1) negligence; (2) negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress; (3) wrongful burial; (4) wrongful disposition of a corpse; (5) trespass and conversion; and (6) violations of the Consumer Sales Practices Act ("CSPA").

Appellants' negligence claims alleged that appellee prevented: (1) Lewis from being "properly interred for eternity in his proper cemetery lot by" appellee's "negligence in filling the" grave with an unidentified body; and (2) Mary from being buried next to her husband. Appellants' negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims alleged that they suffered emotional distress as a result of appellee's conduct: (1) in burying Lewis on top of an unidentified body; (2) in failing to properly bury Lewis; (3) in failing to bury Mary next to her husband; and (4) in burying Mary in a roadway. Appellants' wrongful disposition of a corpse claims asserted that appellee, intentionally and with malice, went forward: (1) with Lewis's burial without informing appellant that an unidentified body was already buried in the grave; and (2) with burying Mary in a roadway. Appellants' wrongful burial claims asserted that the cemetery wrongfully buried Lewis in an occupied grave and wrongfully buried Mary in a roadway. Appellants' CSPA claims alleged that appellee performed its work in a shoddy, incompetent, and unworkmanlike manner and failed to correct the service. Appellants' trespass and conversion claim alleged that appellee, by burying an unknown person in the plot intended for Lewis, committed a trespass upon Lewis's grave site.

On April 10, 2000, appellee filed a motion for summary judgment. Appellee asserted that while most of appellants' claims were premised upon their claim that Lewis had been buried on top of another body, appellants presented no concrete evidence that another body had occupied Lewis's grave site. Appellee noted that the grave digger who performed Lewis's disinterment informed appellants that he did not find another body in the grave. Appellee also asserted that contrary to appellants' suggestion, Mary was not buried in a roadway. Rather, appellee argued that the evidence demonstrated that Mary was buried next to (not in) a roadway that serves as a pathway and that appellants agreed to this burial site. Appellee thus argued that no evidence existed to support appellants' claims.

Appellants contended that genuine issues of material fact remained as to each one of their claims and that summary judgment, therefore, would be improper. In particular, appellants argued that genuine issues of material fact remained as to whether: (1) another body occupied Lewis's original grave site; and (2) Mary was buried in a roadway. In support of their argument that genuine issues of material fact remained as to whether Lewis's original grave site had previously been occupied, appellants referred to Max Ellis's, the cemetery's sexton, deposition. Appellants noted that Ellis stated that: (1) when digging the grave for Lewis, he believed the Carsey plot to be full; (2) he nevertheless continued digging; and (3) upon digging Lewis's grave, he hit an old wooden box.

On May 12, 2000, the trial court granted appellee summary judgment. The court concluded that appellants had failed to demonstrate that a genuine issue of material fact remained as to whether Lewis had been buried in a previously occupied grave and, thus, appellants could not illustrate a fact necessary to prove their claims.1 The court noted that although the sexton stated that he encountered wood while digging Lewis's grave, the existence of wood in a grave site, standing alone, did not demonstrate that a body had been buried in the grave. Appellants filed a timely notice of appeal.

In their sole assignment of error, appellants argue that the trial court erred by granting appellee summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
Carsey v. Alexander Cemetery, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carsey-v-alexander-cemetery-unpublished-decision-3-29-2001-ohioctapp-2001.