Emma Jean Jeanne McCoy v. Seth McCoy

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 14, 2025
Docket2023-CA-1089
StatusPublished

This text of Emma Jean Jeanne McCoy v. Seth McCoy (Emma Jean Jeanne McCoy v. Seth McCoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emma Jean Jeanne McCoy v. Seth McCoy, (Ky. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RENDERED: MARCH 14, 2025; 10:00 A.M. TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2023-CA-1089-MR

EMMA JEAN JEANNE MCCOY APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM PIKE CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE HOWARD KEITH HALL, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-CI-01060

SETH MCCOY APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; ACREE AND L. JONES, JUDGES.

ACREE, JUDGE: Appellant, Emma McCoy, appeals the Pike Circuit Court’s

order permanently enjoining the disinterment-reinterment of her late husband’s

body from Pike County’s McCoy Cemetery to one in Floyd County. We affirm.

Because Appellee failed to file a brief in this appeal, we elect to

“accept the appellant’s statement of the facts and issues as correct” and turn to the merits. RAP1 31(H)(3)(a). Appellant does not challenge the circuit court’s

factfinding upon which we also rely. We paraphrase from both sources.

Appellant was married to Donald McCoy when he died. She was his

fifth wife. They lived in Floyd County. Donald died intestate and without

expressing in any writing where he chose to be buried. Appellant and other family

members “consented to having him buried in the ‘McCoy Family Cemetery’ in

Pike County. Don was buried along[side] a previous wife.” (Appellant’s Brief 5).

Several months later, Appellant had a change of heart. She applied

for and, on July 13, 2021, was granted a permit by the State Registrar of Vital

Statistics to disinter Donald’s remains and reinter them in Floyd County. Before

disinterment occurred, Donald’s son, Appellee Seth McCoy, initiated this

injunction action to prevent the move.

At the hearing to decide whether to enter a permanent injunction,

every witness, including Appellant, testified that Donald’s wishes were to be

buried in the McCoy Cemetery. On September 13, 2023, the circuit court granted

a permanent injunction. (Judgment Granting Permanent Injunction, Record (R.)

33). Appellant appealed.

Appellant argues the circuit court failed to give preeminence to the

Appellant’s “paramount right” as surviving spouse to decide where to bury, or

1 Kentucky Rules of Appellate Procedure.

-2- rebury, Donald as that right is expressed in Haney v. Stamper, 125 S.W.2d 761,

762 (Ky. 1939), and as codified in KRS2 367.93117(1)(b), and as that statute is

interpreted in Harrod v. Caney, 547 S.W.3d 536, 543 n.3 (Ky. App. 2018). If

Appellant were making this argument in 1901, it would likely prevail. Today,

however, none of these authorities justifies reversing the circuit court.

In 1901, the common law was that while “there is not a property right

to a dead body in a commercial sense,” the right to bury a loved one certainly

exists. Neighbors v. Neighbors, 65 S.W. 607, 608 (Ky. 1901). The conflict in

cases of this type, then and now, is “the determination as to who has the right . . .

to select a place of sepulcher, and to change it if deemed advisable.” Id. (emphasis

added). No distinction was recognized then as to who has the right as it relates to

interment on the one hand and reinterment after exhumation on the other. The

default answer in both situations was the decedent’s spouse. Id. The explanation

is poignant.

That paramount right in the husband and wife is in consonance with the custom of the country, respected by general sentiment, and has the support of reason. There is a tender and more affectionate relationship between husband and wife than between either and other relatives. In life there is a constant companionship, a continued mutual and dependent relationship, and such ministration in sickness and death that can be given by no other. . . . The wife is certainly nearer in the point of relationship and affection than any other person. She is the constant

2 Kentucky Revised Statutes.

-3- companion of her husband during life, bound to him by the closest ties of love, and should have the paramount right to render the last sacred services to his remains after death.

Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

By the 1930s, a distinction had evolved. In 1933, Kentucky

recognized that distinction in the disinterment-reinterment case of Brake v. Mother

of God’s Cemetery, 65 S.W.2d 739 (Ky. 1933). Citing an opinion by Judge

Cardozo while he was still on the New York Court of Appeals, the Court said

many cases hold that “where the question is one of disinterment for the purposes of

reinterment, the modern rule is not as broad as the rule is stated in the Neighbors

Case . . . .” Id. at 740 (citing Yome v. Gorman, 152 N.E. 126, 128 (N.Y. 1926)).

A few years later, our highest court decided Haney, supra, a case, like

Neighbors, adjudicating who has the right of a decedent’s original interment.

Haney, 125 S.W.2d at 762. “It is settled that, in the absence of the expressed

wishes of the deceased, the surviving spouse, where the parties have been living in

the normal relations of marriage, has the paramount right not only to the custody of

the dead body, but also to determine the time, manner, and place of burial.” Id.

Haney did not change what Brake said about disinterment-

reinterment cases. The circuit court in the case now under review noted the

continued common law distinction. Quoting Judge Cardozo from Brake, the

circuit court said:

-4- [T]he wishes of the surviving spouse are not supreme and final when the body has been laid at rest and the aid of equity is invoked to disturb the quiet of the grave; that in such state of case there will then be “due regard to the interests of the public, the wishes of the decedent, and the rights and feelings of those entitled to be heard by reason of relationship or association.”

(R. 33) (quoting Brake, 65 S.W.2d at 740 (quoting Yome, 152 N.E. at 128)).

About a decade ago, our legislature recognized this distinction too,

with “An Act relating to funeral planning.” 2016 Kentucky Laws Ch. 59 (SB 103)

(codified as KRS 367.93101 to 367.93121) (hereafter the “Act”). The Act

regulates who has the right to bury a decedent’s body. It does not regulate who has

a right to disinter and reinter those buried remains. That is still governed by the

common law. The circuit court here recognized this distinction.

The Appellant’s failure to recognize the distinction is revealed by her

citations to the statutes codifying the right and to Harrod v. Caney, supra, that

applied the Act in an interment case. Both the statute and the opinion apply to

events culminating in the “funeral” of the deceased. KRS 367.93117(1)

(“arrangements for funeral services” by “burial or cremation” and “other

ceremonial arrangements”).

“Funeral” is defined for purposes of that statute as “the ceremonies or

services related to the final disposition and interment of a human body or body

parts[.]” KRS 316.010(6) (emphasis added); KRS 367.93101

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Related

Kimbler v. Arms
102 S.W.3d 517 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2003)
Triplett v. Livingston County Board of Education
967 S.W.2d 25 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1997)
Haney v. Stamper
125 S.W.2d 761 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)
Brunton v. Roberts
97 S.W.2d 413 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
Brake v. Mother of God's Cemetery
65 S.W.2d 739 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
Yome v. Gorman
152 N.E. 126 (New York Court of Appeals, 1926)
Harrod v. Caney
547 S.W.3d 536 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2018)
Neighbors v. Neighbors
65 S.W. 607 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1901)

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Emma Jean Jeanne McCoy v. Seth McCoy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emma-jean-jeanne-mccoy-v-seth-mccoy-kyctapp-2025.