Flores v. Baca

871 P.2d 962, 117 N.M. 306
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
Docket20782, 20790
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 871 P.2d 962 (Flores v. Baca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flores v. Baca, 871 P.2d 962, 117 N.M. 306 (N.M. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

RANSOM, Justice.

Hipólito Flores died on July 9, 1989, survived by his widow, Maria Luisa Flores, and by thirteen children. A daughter, Rachel Ramirez, contracted with Sam Baca, doing business as Baca’s Funeral Chapels, to prepare Hipolito’s body and to perform funeral and burial services. Hipolito’s body was exhumed for autopsy two weeks after interment, at which time the family discovered that the lower half of the body had not been embalmed. Maria and the children sued Baca on claims of breach of contract, negligence, fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress, gross negligence, and outrage, seeking compensatory and punitive damages. The trial court dismissed all claims except for the breach of contract claim of Maria for emotional distress damages and of Rachel for monetary damages.

The jury returned a verdict of $500,000 in compensatory damages in favor of Maria and of $360 in favor of Rachel. On Baca’s motion for new trial, the court set aside the judgment in favor of Maria and granted a new trial on the issue of damages only. At the second trial, the jury awarded Maria $100,-000 in compensatory damages. On appeal, the children urge reversal of the orders and judgments dismissing their claims. Maria appeals a directed verdict on punitive damages. Baca appeals the judgment in favor of Maria, claiming the trial court erred in submitting Maria’s breach of contract claim, in admitting hearsay evidence to support the damages claim, and in refusing to give an instruction limiting compensation to severe emotional distress. Having consolidated the appeals, we affirm the judgment awarding compensatory damages to Maria, reverse the directed verdict on punitive damages, and remand for further proceedings relative to punitive damages for Maria and compensatory and punitive damages for severe emotional distress as may be proved by any one or more of the surviving children.

Facts. In March 1989, Hipólito and Maria executed individual contracts with Guardian Plans, Inc. for prospective funeral and burial services to be provided by Baca Funeral Homes. The bottom of Hipolito’s “Statement of Goods and Services Selected” reflected a handwritten notation stating: “Embalming expressly authorized.” Maria testified that she insisted upon embalming when she and her husband arranged their pre-need funeral contracts because of strong negative memories of her father’s death and funeral. A disclaimer in the contract states: “No claims were made to me/us as to ... the effect that embalming ... would delay the decomposition of the remains for a long term or indefinite time____”

After Hipolito’s death, Rachel made all of the funeral arrangements based upon the pre-need contract. She signed a separate contract containing the same disclaimer regarding the effect of embalming and paid for the funeral costs. Rachel’s sisters and brothers shared equally in those costs. Whether Rachel was acting for other members of the family (as disclosed or undisclosed principals) by reason of the children’s equal contributions to the cost of the funeral is a question raised in the briefs that becomes moot by reason of our approach to the duty issues involved.

Maria and the children testified that the funeral and burial services were satisfactory. Fifteen days after the funeral, Hipolito’s body was exhumed for an autopsy. Some of Hipolito’s sons were present at the disinterment. They testified at the first trial that they saw mold on the hands and a bloody purge of fluid from the mouth, nose, and ears of the deceased and smelled the stench of decay. Three sons accompanied the body to the autopsy and then reported back to the others the determinations of the medical examiners. The autopsy revealed that the embalming ended at about the waist. Decomposition included the sloughing of skin over the entire lower part of the body. When the body was returned to the funeral home for reinterment, Maria and several of the children smelled the decay coming from the garage where the casket was located. Maria could not view Hipolito’s body again because of the overpowering smell and she later overheard her sons describing to her other children the condition of the body. At the first trial, Maria described her feelings of distress, including sleeplessness, lack of appetite, and depression. At the second trial, she testified to the loss of physical control of her body upon smelling her husband’s body, crying, depression, and long-term emotional pain. Her children also testified that she had been depressed, suffered frequent crying spells, and that she stated she felt her husband’s body had been disgraced and dishonored. At the first trial, some of the children also testified about the emotional trauma they felt as a result of the experience, but this testimony was not allowed at the second trial.

At the first trial, testimony from experts (including Baca) established that an embalmer would know whether there was incomplete profusion of the embalming fluid by either looking at or touching the embalmed body. Baca testified that although he did not conduct the embalming himself, he reviewed the work of his employee by both visual inspection and by palpitating the extremities and believed it to be satisfactory. The medical examiner, however, testified that he had not seen a more inadequate case of embalming. None of this testimony was allowed at the second trial. There, the court instructed the jury that an incomplete embalming had been performed for which Baca was liable, and the children testified that their mother overheard them describe that the lower half of Hipolito’s body had not been embalmed and that there was bloody purge on his face and pillow and mold on his hands.

Summary of proceedings. Baca filed a motion to dismiss all causes of action (except for the breach of contract claims of Maria and Rachel) for failure to state claims upon which relief could be granted. After a hearing on the motion, the court dismissed all causes of action except for Maria’s claim of outrage, Rachel’s claim for breach of contract, and claims sounding in bystander recovery for the children who were actually present at the exhumation. In a letter to counsel explaining its ruling, the court stated that only the widow had “quasi-property rights” in the body for tort actions, only the daughter Rachel had signed the contract for a breach of contract action, and undisclosed participants had no rights in the contract. Less than two weeks before trial, Baca filed (and the court heard) a motion for partial summary judgment. The court modified its earlier order to add that the children present at the exhumation also could present claims founded on the theory of “intentional infliction of mental duress [sic].” The children argued unsuccessfully that their claims were not based on bystander recovery but on willful and wanton misbehavior in failing to embalm or at least in negligent mishandling of the corpse.

At trial, after the close of plaintiffs’ case, the court directed a verdict on Maria’s claim of outrage, but on its own motion reinstated her claim of breach of contract. The court also directed a verdict on the children’s claims for negligence (that it couched as bystander claims) and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and on all claims for punitive damages; the court limited Rachel’s claim to monetary damages for the casket liner and failure to embalm.

Cause of action arising out of funeral and burial services.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
871 P.2d 962, 117 N.M. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flores-v-baca-nm-1994.