Curlin v. Curlin

228 S.W. 602, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 762
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1921
DocketNo. 1757.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 602 (Curlin v. Curlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curlin v. Curlin, 228 S.W. 602, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 762 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HUPP, C. J.

J. H. Curlin, his wife, M. E. Curlin, and Ernest Curlin, father, mother, and brother respectively of Will Curlin, deceased, brought this suit to restrain Mrs. Winnie Curlin, the surviving widow of Will Curlin, and an undertaker, from disinterring and removing the body of deceased from one lot to another, in the Nacona cemetery, in Montague county. Upon final trial before the court judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs, perpetually restraining and enjoining the defendant from removing or attempting to remove the body. The findings of the trial court and conclusions of law will sufficiently state the facts, which are as follows:

“(1) W. L. Curlin died on March 4, 1919, and was buried on a lot in the city cemetery of the city of Nacona; that after his burial on or about the-day of December, 1919, the defendants undertook to disinter the body and remove the same to another part of the cemetery, and to prevent the same sued out. and there was granted a temporary writ of injunction restraining them from so doing; that on the- day of January, 1920, at the January term of this court, the case was heard upon its merits, and upon the plea of the defendant to dissolve the injunction the court heard the same without the intervention of the jury, and by an order perpetuated the injunction upon the following facts as found by the court:
“(2) The plaintiffs J. H. Curlin and M. E. Curlin are husband and wife and the father and mother of W. L. Curlin, deceased, and the plaintiff Ernest Curlin was his brother.
“(3) The defendant was the wife of W. L. Curlin, deceased, in his lifetime, and is now his surviving widow and single; that the defendant J. A. Burgess is an undertaker, and was employed by the defendant Winnie Curlin to exhume, or disinter the body and remove the same.
‘(4) On March 4, 1919, W. L. Curlin died at his home in Nacona, Tex., at which time he was living with the defendant. Winnie Curlin was sick and unable to attend the funeral of her said deceased husband, but directed his burial in the following manner: She had a coffin and shroud selected under her direction, and requested of J. H. Curlin and his wife that her deceased husband, W. L. Curlin, be buried on a lot that had been previously selected by him about March, 1918, as a burial lot for the Curlin family — that is, for himself and his said father, mother, and brother — and. expressed himself that he had as soon be buried there as any place in the cemetery, and upon which a grandchild of J. H. Curlin and wife had been buried; that she requested that space be reserved by the side of the grave of her deceased husband, where she could be buried' later in the event of her death, which request was complied with by the said J. H. Curlin and wife, plaintiffs, and others, who assisted in the burial of the deceased.
“(5) That after the burial of the said W. L. Curlin, deceased, the said J. H. Curlin placed a cement curb around the said burial lot and otherwise the grave of the deceased had been taken care of and eared for by plaintiffs, and that in the meantime arrangements were made by both the plaintiffs and the defendant Winnie Curlin each to buy a monument for the grave, but it was agreed among themselves that the plaintiff J. H. Curlin would countermand the order he had given and permit the monument. *603 ordered by the defendant Winnie Ourlin to be erected; further, it was mutually agreed and so understood, by both parties that each should have access to the grave and to keep and care for the same without hindrance; that also the plaintiff J. H. Ourlin offered to pay for the casket and share other expenses, which the defendant, Winnie Ourlin, paid.
“(6) That the lot on which he was buried •was selected by the deceased himself and purchased from the city of Nacona as a burial lot of the Ourlin family, and which lot was lo•cated in a very desirable part of the cemetery, where it could have attention by the sex’ton as well as by both plaintiffs and defendant Winnie Ourlin.
“(7) That on or about - day of December, A. D. 1919, defendant Winnie Ourlin employed the defendant J. A. Burgess to disinter and remove the body to another part of the cemetery, which act was caused by an estrangement between the defendant Winnie Ourlin and the plaintiff, Mrs. M. E. Ourlin, but to the location there was no advantage to be derived by the removal of the body to another part of the cemetery, one location being equally as good as another part of the cemetery; that the defendant Winnie Ourlin did not communicate to the plaintiffs her intention of removing the body, and they did not know the same until the grave was being dug into by the defendant J. A. Burgess.
“(8) I find that the deceased, prior to his death, had expressed a desire to be buried on the west side of the cemetery, and at the time of the attempted removal the defendant Winnie Ourlin, had procured a half lot in the northwest part of the cemetery upon which she intended to place the body; and also intended -to place the monument which she had purchased at his grave.
“(9) That the defendants have procured from the proper authorities all necessary permits •to exhume and remove the body of the deceased to the lot selected by Winnie Ourlin on the west part of the cemetery.
“(10) I find that the respective parties 'to this suit love and cherish the memory of the -deceased as become father, mother, brother, and wife, respectively. Upon these findings the court reached the following
“Conclusions of Law.
“(1) Therefore the court concludes that the burial of the deceased husband of the defendant Winnie Ourlin as aforesaid was buried under her directions, and as requested by her in all matters pertaining to his funeral and his burial.
“(2) And further the plaintiffs performed such duty at her request as the next kin, as it was their duty to do under the law, and thus the funeral, burial, and disposition of the body was in all respects complied with under the requirements of the law.
“(3) That the body having been thus buried, and no good reason being shown therefor, in the opinion of the court, it should not be permitted to be removed, and the court therefore in his judgment perpetuated the injunction.”

The evidence in this case would have authorized the court to find that appellant did not consent to the burial of the body of her husband on the appellee’s lot, but, on the contrary, • instructed the father to procure a lot in the west part of the cemetery, and in-ferí the body at that place, and that this request was made by appellants to comply with the express desire of her husband during his last illness. The trial court has seen proper, however; to find to the contrary and to accept the testimony of the appellees. The findings of the trial court are not challenged by exceptions or assignments, and these findings have support in the testimony. The only question presented is one of law upon the facts found. It is established by most of the courts in the United States that the wife, upon the death of the husband, has the primary and paramount right to the possession of his body and the control of the burial or other legal disposition thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 602, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curlin-v-curlin-texapp-1921.