Frederic J. Crosby, Inc. v. Lockhart

2 Mass. App. Div. 403

This text of 2 Mass. App. Div. 403 (Frederic J. Crosby, Inc. v. Lockhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frederic J. Crosby, Inc. v. Lockhart, 2 Mass. App. Div. 403 (Mass. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Carr, J.

This is an action of contract in which an undertaker seeks to recover for his services in furnishing the funeral of the father of the two defendants. The facts stated in the report are meagre. It is set forth that counsel agreed that on September 15, 1936, Charles E. Lockhart, [404]*404who was the blood father of the two defendants, died leaving no estate; that the plaintiff furnished the funeral of the deceased at the request of the widow, who was also indigent, and at her request charged the funeral to the defendants. The defendants never gave the widow authority so to do, or never had anything to do with ordering the funeral and have denied liability and that the charges were fair and reasonable.

The plaintiff maintains that the person who is responsible for the necessary support of the deceased while living is liable for his burial expenses. The plaintiff concedes that at common law a son was not responsible for the support of his parent. It contends, however, that by virtue of Gen. Laws, (Ter. Ed.) Ch. 117 relating to the support of poor persons and especially by §6 which provides that certain kindred of poor people including children, if of sufficient ability, and living in the Commonwealth, shall be bound to support them, the duty to support, on which it may rely, is established.

At the outset, we find the report inadequate. The trial judge, besides denying the plaintiff’s request for ruling, ruled that regardless of the fact that the defendants are blood children of the deceased and live in the Commonwealth and regardless of whether or not the defendants are of sufficient ability, the defendants, as matter of law, are not liable to the plaintiff. The report does not state that the defendants lived in the Commonwealth and were of sufficient ability to bear the expense, nor does it set forth evidence from which these facts might be inferred. It is obvious that the ruling that the plaintiff could not recover was made without hearing any evidence. Counsel for both parties in argument before us agreed that such evidence existed and was offered to the trial judge. If we thought [405]*405that such evidence would help the plaintiff we would send the report back for amendment. We think, however, that even with such facts the plaintiff could not prevail. He realizes that we appear to be passing on an academic question not supported by provable facts. The trial judge in his ruling assumed that residence and ability existed and we, therefore, pass on the issues as though the evidence were in the report.

If the duty to bury could be forced upon the defendants in this case certain other facts would be necessary to fix liability for the funeral. It seems clear that where the duty rests on a person to bury and he neglects it, one who by reason of the necessity of the situation goes to expense for the funeral may recover of the one who ought to have performed the duty. But it must appear from the situation that he was not a mere intermeddler. Cunningham, v. Reardon, 98 Mass. 538, 539. McGrath v. Sheehan, 1936 A. S. 2429. Keener on Quasi Contracts, p. 341 et seq., and cases there cited and quoted.

If there had been a full trial, the limits of the plaintiff’s case might have been discovered. It might have appeared under what circumstances the funeral was arranged, whether the situation required immediate arrangements without consulting the defendants, whether they were notified or consulted, whether at the time they were near at hand or where they could not be reached. If, on further appeal, the court of last resort took a different view of the law, such evidence might be important. We feel, however, that the situation is so clear that in making this decision on the stated and assumed facts we are doing the plaintiff no injustice.

In Cunningham v. Reardon, 98 Mass. 538, 539, an action in which the plaintiff was allowed to. recover of the defend[406]*406ant for the expense of burying his wife, whom he had driven from home by cruelty, appears this dictum. ‘ ‘ The responsibility for funeral expenses is not a new and distinct cause of action, different in kind, or in the rules by which it is created; hut an incident to the obligation to furnish bodily support.”

On this dictum the plaintiff bases his thesis that the duty to support carries the duty to bury. He fortifies his position with quotations to similar effect from Jackson “Law of Cadavers” (1936) p. 79 and Perley “Mortuary Law” p. 78.

We think the plaintiff’s case fails for three reasons.

1. Support is not the basis of duty to bury.
2. Support as defined in the Statute does not include burial.
3. Whatever duty of support is created by the Statute, the plaintiff cannot use to its advantage.

Without undertaking to define the limits of domestic liability, we agree that at common law, under some circumstances, the duty of burying a wife rests upon the husband; Cunningham v. Reardon, 98 Mass. 538, McGrath v. Sheehan, 1936 A. S. 2429, Same case, 1936 Mass. A. D. R. 60, although it is held that as between husband and the estate of the wife leaving property, the estate is primarily liable; Constantinides v. Walsh, 146 Mass. 281, Morrissey v. Mulhern, 168 Mass. 412, and that the father has the duty to bury his minor child; Schouler Marriage and Divorce, 6th Ed. §792, and that when the father dies or deserts, the mother becomes the head of the family and doubtless the duty as to children falls on her. Tornroos v. R. H. White Co., 220 Mass. 336, 341.

But this does not prove that the duty to bury grows out of the duty to support.

[407]*407In Magrath v. Sheehan, 1936 A. S. 2429, same case, 1936 Mass. A. D. R. 60, the parties at least believed that the question was raised whether a husband was under duty to bury a wife who was living apart under such conditions that he would not be under duty to support her. (cf. Alley v. Winn, 134 Mass. 77, 79; Sturbridge v. Franklin, 160 Mass. 149; Fisher v. Drew, 247 Mass. 178, 182.) Both argued this point in their briefs to which reference is here made. Doubtless it was inartificially raised. This issue was met in the Appellate Division. Bolster, C. J., said: “But the present case is not determined by decisions upon rights and liabilities while both husband and wife remained alive, although we are not unaware of the fact that in some opinions, an analogy has been attempted.” And again “Marital discord should stop at the grave.” In the Supreme Judicial Court the question went off on the technical meaning of “living apart for justifiable cause.” The question the parties hoped to support or defeat was not touched even as dictum. In such discussion as was accorded the question of marital duties nothing was said of support carrying the duty to bury. On the contrary the court said: “The duty of a husband to provide a proper funeral for his dead wife and his legal liability to another for reasonable expenses justifiably incurred in providing such a funeral rest upon fundamental concepts of decency and humanity. It arrives if at all by implication of law ‘from the necessity of the case.’ ”

It is stated that “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 any way a suitable funeral.” Finley v.

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2 Mass. App. Div. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederic-j-crosby-inc-v-lockhart-massdistctapp-1937.