Finley v. . Atlantic Transport Co.

115 N.E. 715, 220 N.Y. 249, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 964
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 115 N.E. 715 (Finley v. . Atlantic Transport Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finley v. . Atlantic Transport Co., 115 N.E. 715, 220 N.Y. 249, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 964 (N.Y. 1917).

Opinions

Hogan, J.

The Appellate Division of the first department has certified in this case that in its opinion a question of law is involved which ought to be reviewed by the Court of Appeals, as follows:

1. Does the complaint state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action ?

2. Is there a defect of parties in that the other next of kin of Clement B. Finley are not joined as parties plaintiff in this action ?

*253 Briefly summarized, the complaint alleges that the defendant is engaged in the operation of a steamship line and employed in the transportation of passengers between England and the United States.

June 28th, 1913, one Clement B. Finley purchased from defendant a ticket entitling him to first-class passage from London to New York on the steamship Minneapolis, operated by defendant, and boarded the steamship, upon which there were none but first-class passengers and the crew. The steamship proceeded to the city of New York and docked at that port about six o’clock in the evening of July 1th, 1913.

The plaintiff is a son of Clement B. Finley, deceased, The latter at the time of his death had no wife living, but left the plaintiff and other sons and daughters. The plaintiff and Clement B. Finley, during his lifetime, resided at Chattanooga, Tennessee.

During the course of the voyage and about 1 o’clock in the morning of July 2d, 1913, Clement B. Finley died. Immediately upon his death defendant took possesion of his property and effects of the value of seven hundred fifty dollars, amongst which property and effects were letters indicating that plaintiff was a son of Clement B. Finley, and the address of the plaintiff; that the amount of the personal effects of the deceased greatly exceeded the sum necessary to defray the expenses of notice to plaintiff of such death, which might have been communicated to him at his address, together with the expense of embalming the body, transportation of the same to New York and giving it a decent burial.

Shortly after the death of Mr. Finley the defendant caused his body to be embalmed, whereby the body was kept in a perfect state of preservation and was made proof against decomposition for a period greatly exceeding the time ordinarily occupied by the voyage from the point at which the steamship was when Mr. Finley died to the docking point at New York city.

*254 It is further alleged that the defendant continued to carry the body of Mr. Finley until about five o’clock in the afternoon of July 6th, 1913, when the steamship approached tidal waters near Nantucket Shoals, Massachusetts, at which túne defendant, though in possession of the property and effects of the deceased and information as to plaintiff’s address as stated, and though the body was then in a perfect state of preservation and proof against decomposition, and while plaintiff was then and at all times ready, willing and able to receive the body for burial, determine the place of burial and defray all expenses incident thereto, nevertheless the defendant negligently, wrongfully and willfully failed and refused to notify plaintiff or any of the next of kin of the deceased of the death of Mr. Finley and failed and refused to transport the body to the docking point in New York and at the time when in or near said tidal waters negligently, wrongfully and willfully caused the body to be cast into the sea in a place unknown and inaccessible to plaintiff.

That on July Jth, 1913, about 2:30 p. m. defendant notified plaintiff that Clement B. Finley had died at sea, and plaintiff immediately notified defendant that he would procure an undertaker and meet the steamship at New York to take charge of the body; that when the steamship docked at New York, about six o’clock on the evening of that day, plaintiff and the undertaker in his behalf demanded of defendant the body of his father, Mr. Finley, for the purpose of burial; that defendant then and has since, wrongfully refused to deliver possession of the body to plaintiff, one of the next of kin of said deceased, or to the undertaker, and informed the undertaker and plaintiff that the body was disposed of at sea as above described several hours before the steamship docked.

The complaint then alleges that the acts of defendant were negligent, wrongful and willful, a. gross outrage upon plaintiff’s rights and sensibilities and an unlawful *255 interference with and violation of his rights to the solace and comfort of a burial of the body of Clement B. Finley by the plaintiff and other next of kin, and the right of plaintiff to receive the body for the purposes of determining the place of burial and the burial of the same, whereby plaintiff was shocked and wounded infeélings, caused mental distress, anguish, suffering, expense, etc., for which he demands damages.

That there is no right of property in a dead body in the ordinary acceptation of the term is undoubtedly true when limited to a property right as understood in the commercial sense. Respect for the dead, the feelings of mankind for their deceased parents, relatives and friends has been recognized by the legislature and the courts. In this state, the Penal Law, section 2211, provides ‘‘ except. in the cases in which a right to dissect it is expressly conferred by law, every dead body of a human being, lying within this state, must -be decently buried within a reasonable time after death.” A right of dissection exists only when a coroner is authorized by law to hold an inquest and no further; or whenever and so far as the husband, wife or next of kin of the deceased, being charged by law with the duty of burial, may authorize dissection for the purpose of ascertaining the cause of death and no further ; by order of the court in a criminal proceeding to ascertain the cause of death (Penal Law, § 2213); by medical colleges upon bodies delivered to them by hospitals, prisons, asylums, etc., provided no corpse shall be delivered or received if desired for interment by relatives or friends within forty-eight hours after death, or, if known to have relatives or friends, Avithout the assent of such relatives or friends, etc. (Public Health Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 45), §§ 31G, 311.)

At common law it is the duty of an individual under whose roof a poor person dies to carry the body decently covered to the place of burial and to refrain from doing anything which prevents in anywise a suitable burial. *256 The body cannot be cast out so as to expose the same to violation or to offend the feelings or injure the health of the living. (Reg. v. Stewart, 12 A. & E. 773.) In Patterson v. Patterson (59 N. Y. 574, 583) Judge Folger quoted from the case of Chapple v. Coope (13 M. & W. 252) with approval: “There are many authorities which lay it down that decent Christian burial is a part of a man’s own rights; and we think it no great extension of the rule to say, that it may be classed as a personal advantage and reasonably necessary to him,” and from Beg. v. Stewart {supra): “This right existing, the law casts upon some one the duty of seeing that it is accorded.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 N.E. 715, 220 N.Y. 249, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-atlantic-transport-co-ny-1917.