Hennings v. Callahan

689 N.W.2d 137, 2004 Iowa App. LEXIS 863, 2004 WL 1853925
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 14, 2004
Docket03-0586
StatusPublished

This text of 689 N.W.2d 137 (Hennings v. Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hennings v. Callahan, 689 N.W.2d 137, 2004 Iowa App. LEXIS 863, 2004 WL 1853925 (iowactapp 2004).

Opinion

SACKETT, C.J.

Defendants-appellants Trustees of Homer Township, Benton County, Iowa, appeal the ruling of the trial court reversing their decision to permit the placement of a memorial stone in the Kirchner Cemetery. On appeal defendants claim the trial court erred in ordering the removal of the memorial stone, as it is the role of the trustees, not the role of the district court, to make such decisions. We reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Kirchner Cemetery is maintained, controlled and presumably owned by defendant trustees. This case involves an area in the cemetery where William and Anna Hennings, who died in 1877 and 1902, respectively, are buried. Headstones mark William’s and Anna’s graves, and the area, apparently large enough for more than two graves, is surrounded by a wrought-iron fence which appears to be of *138 the same vintage as the headstones. No other persons have been buried in the fenced area, and prior to the placement of the memorial stone now at issue, only the headstones of William and Anna were in the fenced area.

In 2000 the children of Lloyd Hennings, a great-grandson of William and Anna, put a memorial stone honoring Lloyd and his wife, Helen, in an open space inside the fenced area between the headstones of William and Anna. Neither Lloyd, who died in 1984, nor his wife, Helen, who died in 2000, is buried beneath the memorial stone.

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Other descendants of William and Anna Hennings objected to the placement of the memorial stone and appealed to the Homer Township trustees. The trustees, who have maintained and controlled the cemetery for at least the past fifty years, held a hearing at the grave site on October 13, 2001. Approximately twenty descendants of William and Anna Hennings were present, most of whom were descendants of Lloyd and Helen Hennings. Of those present, all but two 1 favored the continued placement of the memorial stone where it was. There was testimony by one trustee that he found it persuasive that such a large majority of those present were in favor of leaving the memorial stone where it was. On November 20, 2001 the trustees determined by a two-to-one vote, that the memorial stone could remain within the fenced area.

The trustees based their decision partly on statements by Lloyd’s family at the hearing that Lloyd and his brothers had agreed many years before his death, while fixing William and Anna Hennings’s headstone, that Lloyd would have a memorial stone in the fenced area. These statements were excluded as hearsay at trial. Beverly Parizek, a daughter of Lloyd and Helen, testified at trial that she and her siblings asked the permission of Lloyd’s brother, Ervin, and sister, Pearl, to put the memo *139 rial stone in the fenced area. Lloyd’s brother, Willis, was apparently no longer living at the time. Parizek testified Ervin and Pearl agreed.

Testimony to the contrary came from Ervin’s son, William Hennings. He said that Ervin did not believe Lloyd’s and Helen’s memorial stone should be in the fenced area. Todd Hennings similarly testified to Ervin’s wish that the stone not be placed in the fenced area.

II. SCOPE OF REVIEW

This case was tried at law. In their written briefs, both parties cite Waterhouse v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 593 N.W.2d 141, 142 (Iowa 1999) and contend our scope of review is at law because we are reviewing a decision rendered by the district court in its appellate capacity.

III. ANALYSIS

The question this case presents is whether the district court erred in overturning the decision of the township trustees which permitted the placement of the memorial stone. The trustees argue Iowa Code sections 359.31, 359.32, and 359.37 (2001) vested in them the power to make the decision as to the placement of the memorial stone.

Iowa Code section 359.31 provides,
[Township trustees] shall control any such cemeteries, or appoint trustees for the same, or sell the same to any private corporation for cemetery purposes.

Iowa Code section 359.32 provides, in relevant part,

[Township trustees] shall have authority to provide for the sale of lots or portions thereof, in any cemetery under their control, and make rules in regard thereto, and may provide for perpetual upkeep by the establishment of a perpetual upkeep fund from the proceeds of sale of lots....

Iowa Code section 359.37 provides, in relevant part,

The trustees, board of directors, or other officers having the custody and control of any cemetery in this state, shall have power, subject to the bylaws and regulations of such cemetery, to enclose, improve, and adorn the ground of such cemetery; to construct avenues in the same; to erect proper buildings for the use of said cemetery; to prescribe rules for the improving or adorning the lots therein, or for the erection of monuments or other memorials of the dead upon such lots; and to prohibit any use, division, improvement or adornment of a lot which they may deem improper.

The trustees argue these statutes make them the sole decision-making authority over the cemetery and expressly give them the power to make all determinations as to improvements, adornments, and erections of monuments in the cemetery lots. The trustees argue that the memorial stone placed by the Lloyd Hennings family qualifies as an “improvement,” “adornment” or “erection of a monument” on the William and Anna Hennings plot. Consequently, under section 359.37, all decisions regarding such acts are theirs to make.

In response appellees argue that the decision of the trustees was contrary to Hassenclever v. Romkey, 133 Iowa 470, 110 N.W. 905 (1907), which dealt with a boundary dispute in a cemetery. In that case the Iowa Supreme Court stated,

It is to be noted that neither party has any title, in the usual sense of that word, to their respective burial lots. As members of the public they have the right of burial there, and that right doubtless carries with it the right to protect and care for the graves of their dead and to prevent intrusion or trespass thereon.

*140 Hassenclever, 133 Iowa at 473, 110 N.W. at 906. Appellees use the above language to support their position and the district court’s decision that the ancestral Hen-nings plot should not be disturbed. In Hassenclever, 133 Iowa at 474, 110 N.W. at 907, the court held that the decision of township trustees as to a particular cemetery boundary dispute was not controlling. This decision, however, was due to the trustees’ failure to issue proper notice pri- or to their order, not because cemetery boundary disputes were outside the jurisdiction of the trustees. Hassenclever, 133 Iowa at 474, 110 N.W. at 907. In fact, absent faulty notice, the court’s reasoning in Hassenclever

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Related

Waterhouse v. Iowa District Court for Linn County
593 N.W.2d 141 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1999)
Moore v. Short
288 N.W. 407 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Johnson v. Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Ass'n
9 N.W.2d 385 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1943)
Hassenclever v. Romkey
110 N.W. 905 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
689 N.W.2d 137, 2004 Iowa App. LEXIS 863, 2004 WL 1853925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hennings-v-callahan-iowactapp-2004.