Golden v. Bartholomew

299 N.W. 356, 140 Neb. 65, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 172
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1941
DocketNo. 31112
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 356 (Golden v. Bartholomew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golden v. Bartholomew, 299 N.W. 356, 140 Neb. 65, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 172 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

The legislature in 1937 passed “An act relating to funeral directors and undertakers; to provide for the regulation of [66]*66funeral directing and undertaking” (Laws 1937, ch. 154), which is now chapter 71, art. 32, Comp. St. Supp. 1939. A “funeral director” and “undertaker” is defined as “a person * * * engaged in or conducting the business of * * * (b) Providing for or maintaining a funeral establishment * * *.” So far as material here the act defines a “funeral establishment” as “a place of business * * * devoted to the care and preparation for burial * * * of human dead bodies * * * containing * * * a display room containing a stock of funeral caskets and shipping cases.” Comp. St. Supp. 1939, sec. 71-3209. “The business of a funeral director must be * * * engaged in at a fixed place or establishment and no person * * * shall =i: * =1= engage jn * * * the business of a funeral director, unless first licensed so to do by the department of health.” Section 71-3210. The applicant for a funeral director’s license shall furnish “proof satisfactory to” the board of examiners for embalming* that the establishment “in which he intends to conduct business * * * is or will be constructed,, equipped and maintained in all respects as a funeral establishment as defined” in the act. Section 71-3211. The department shall grant a license if the board of examiners finds (among other things) “that the proposed funeral establishment is, or will be, constructed and equipped as required by” section 71-3209. Section 71-3212. The act further provides that the department shall, upon the recommendation and finding of the board of examiners, suspend or revoke licenses after hearing, upon such licensee being* found guilty by said board of “ (2) Unprofessional conduct which is hereby defined to include * * * (1) Violation of any of the provisions of this act.” Section 71-3218.

The act further provides a procedure for the revocation or suspension of a license, including the filing of a petition with the board of examiners, a notice, hearing, finding, an order of revocation or suspension, and a denial of the right of the licensee to practice funeral direction after revocation of or during* suspension of a license. Section 71-3219. An appeal and trial de novo in the district court for Lancaster county is also provided; however, “In the event the licensee [67]*67appeals, the decision of the board shall not be stayed by the proceedings on appeal and such appeal shall not operate to restore the right of the licensee to practice pending such appeal.” Section 71-3220. The act further provides a penalty for any person who shall engage in the business of funeral directing or undertaking “without having complied with the provisions of this act and without being licensed so to do.” Section 71-3227. The act further provides in the first section (Laws 1937, ch. 154, sec. 1) that “The board of examiners in embalming may adopt such rules as may be reasonable and proper for the purpose of carrying into effect the' provisions of this act.” Section 71-3209, supra. Also, “The department shall have power, upon the recommendations and approval of the board of examiners in embalming, to adopt and enforce reasonable rules and regulations relating to the business of a funeral director, to the sanitary condition of places where such business or practice is conducted, with particular regard to plumbing, sewage, ventilation and equipment, and generally to carry out the various provisions of this act in the protection of the peace, health, safety, welfare and morals of the public.” Section 71-3218, supra.

• The plaintiff was on February 23, 1938, licensed under the act as a funeral director by the department of health and engaged in that business in the city of Omaha. About April 1, 1940, a petition was filed with the board of examiners charging that the plaintiff for more than a year past has had a display room for caskets in his funeral establishment and that during that period he had wilfully failed, neglected and refused to keep any stock of funeral caskets and shipping cases whatsoever in said establishment, contrary to the provisions of the act; that Rule 5 of the rules adopted under said act by the board of examiners in embalming, provides as follows:

“A suitable minimum stock of caskets shall be determined by the number of complete adult funerals sold per year and shall be on the following basis: 1 to 25 cases per year, inc., 6 adult caskets; 26 to 50 cases per year, inc., 9 adult caskets; [68]*6851 to 75 cases per year, inc., 12 adult caskets; 76 to 100 cases-per year, inc., 15 adult caskets; all over 100 cases per year, inc., 20 adult caskets.
“The above schedule shall be construed 'to mean a minimum stock of adult caskets of different styles and does not prohibit the displaying of more caskets.”

That the plaintiff had an average of about 50 adult funerals a year and that he had for more than a year neglected and refused to keep on hand and display in his funeral establishment “any stock of funeral caskets or shipping cases” and had neglected and refused to have on hand and display “a sufficient stock of adult caskets of different styles to suit the requirements of said rule;” and that on April 1, 1940, he had failed to have on display in said establishment any stock of funeral caskets and shipping cases, contrary to the provisions of the act and the rules and regulations of the board of examiners. The prayer was for a revocation or suspension of plaintiff’s license after notice and hearing. Hearing was held April 11, 1940, and findings of fact made sustaining the allegations of the petition. The board on said date entered an order recommending to the department of health that plaintiff’s license be suspended for 60 days and that he be prohibited from engaging in the practice of funeral directing during that time. May 9, 1940, plaintiff filed an amended petition in the district court for Lancaster county against the director of health and the governor wherein he alleged that he was a licensed funeral director; the official status of the defendants; the filing of the petition before the board of examiners and the order entered (described above herein) ; that the recommendation of the board was before the department, and that unless restrained the defendants in their official positions would enter the order suspending his license; that while an appeal is permitted under section 71-3220, supra, said appeal would not operate as a supersedeas and no supersedeas of the order -is permitted pending an appeal; that the plaintiff has an established business in Omaha as a funeral director, with a large investment therein and a number of employees; [69]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 356, 140 Neb. 65, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-v-bartholomew-neb-1941.