Hodge v. Cameron, Exr.

200 A. 238, 132 Pa. Super. 1, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1938
DocketAppeal, 86
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 200 A. 238 (Hodge v. Cameron, Exr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodge v. Cameron, Exr., 200 A. 238, 132 Pa. Super. 1, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This was an action in assumpsit brought against a decedent’s estate by an undertaker employed by one of the next of kin, to recover his charges for funeral services. Under direction of the court, Braham, J., a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for such sum as would compensate him for the services he had rendered up to the time that demand for the body was made upon him by the executor and the latter’s undertaker, together with express disavowal of his employment and notice that, if he proceeded he must look solely to the person who employed him for his pay. Plaintiff presented a motion for a new trial and from the order granting the same, the defendant has appealed. „

Mrs. Agnes Ball, a widow aged sixty-two years, died testate at about five o’clock a.m. on October 20, 1935, at the Jameson Memorial Hospital, New Castle, Pa. With her at the time of death were Donald L. Cameron, the executor named in her will, and Mrs. Margaret Hinkson and Mrs. Dunbar, two of the sisters of the decedent. Mr. Cameron informed them that decedent had left a will, leaving her property to him. Under the agreed statement of facts filed in this case, Mr. Cameron *3 avers and Mrs. Hinkson denies, that he also informed her at the same time that he had been named as executor in the will. He left the hospital immediately following the death and drove to his home at Wampum, some ten miles distant, where he employed the Marshall Undertaking Company and returned with the undertaker to the hospital.

In the meantime, Mrs. Margaret Hinkson, a sister of testatrix, without the knowledge or consent of the executor, had employed the plaintiff, whose place of business was within a few blocks of the hospital, as undertaker, and he had secured the body.

When Mr. Cameron, the executor, with his undertaker arrived at the hospital, they found the body already in possession of the plaintiff. They went immediately to plaintiff’s place of business and demanded the body, which the plaintiff, after a conference with Mrs. Hinkson, refused to surrender. The executor thereupon gave definite notice to plaintiff, disavowing all responsibility for his appointment and specifically informing him that he would have to look to Mrs. Hinkson for his pay. All this took place prior to 8:30 a.m. on the morning that decedent died.

The plaintiff, relying upon his employment by Mrs. Hinkson, proceeded with the funeral and thereafter presented his bill tb Mr. Cameron, the executor, for payment by the estate, which payment was refused. Plaintiff brought this action against the estate of decedent and at the trial a verdict in the amount of $26.50 was returned in his favor, under direction of the court, for his service to the time of express disavowal by the executor. The will was not probated or letters testamentary issued thereon until after the funeral.

Plaintiff presented a motion for new trial, which was granted and defendant has appealed from the motion and order thereon granting the same, which has been assigned as error. The court below has certified of *4 record that the reasons for granting the motion were solely questions of law, and if erroneously decided, a new trial would be unnecessary and not in the interests of justice.

Among the agreed statement of facts are the following: The casket, the vault and other necessary funeral items were selected on the afternoon before decedent’s burial by brothers and sisters of the decedent. At the trial, Mrs. Hinkson and her husband, Mr. Hinkson and Mrs. Dunbar, a sister, all testified that the decedent, Mrs. Agnes Ball, had expressed a desire in their presence that Mr. Hodge, who had buried her mother, be engaged as undertaker to conduct her funeral, and Mr. Cameron had testified that the decedent had at one time expressed a desire to him to have Mr. Marshall, whom she had secured as undertaker for her benefactor, Mr. Leavitt, act as her funeral director. The court submitted to the jury a question of fact as to the testimony on the point of the decedent’s preferences, and the jury found as a fact that the decedent had expressed a desire to Mrs. Hinkson to have Hodge as her funeral director and had not expressed a desire to have Marshall as her funeral director.

As stated by the court below, “The naked question of law which emerges is, whether the executor or next of kin has the right to select the funeral director...... “What we now hold is that an unqualified executor cannot, as a matter of law, by a simple notice to the undertaker, negative funeral arrangements made in good faith by the next of kin who were brothers and sisters, and render the funeral director who proceeds on the directions of the next of kin a volunteer as to the estate.” Accordingly, the court granted a new trial. With this conclusion we agree both on general principles governing the question involved in this case and the facts agreed upon.

The court below, in a very learned and comprehen *5 sive opinion, has discussed the cases in our own state as also in other jurisdictions. In no case has the exact question of the respective rights of next of kin and the rights of an executor named in a will, but not yet qualified by the grant of letters thereon, been considered or decided.

The leading case in this state where the subject is discussed is that of Pettigrew v. Pettigrew, 207 Pa. 313, 56 A. 878, in an elaborate opinion by Mr. Chief Justice Mitchell. Quoting therefrom on pp. 316, 317: “The statute puts the duty of paying the decedent’s debts out of his assets, on his executor, and expressly names funeral expenses as first in the order of priority of payment. Prima facie, therefore, the duty to determine when, where and in what manner the body shall be buried rests with the executor or administrator. But his right is not absolute nor his judgment conclusive. The determination must rest as said in Fox v. Gordon, supra, ‘upon considerations arising partly out of the domestic relations......partly out of the universal sentiment......that the dead should repose in some spot where they will be secure from profanation; partly out of what is demanded by society for the preservation of the public health, morality and decency; and partly often out of what is required by a proper respect for and observance of the wishes of the departed themselves.’ Under the statute in Pennsylvania the right to administration belongs first to the surviving husband or widow. To such survivor, therefore, belongs the right of control of the body for interment, and a waiver of the right to administer will not include a waiver of such right of control unless it be express and absolute. In the exigencies of business and the interest of the estate it is not unfrequently desirable that a stranger, or even a creditor should administer, but no court would sanction a disregard by such an administrator of the wishes of a widow or even of the next of Join, as to *6 the place and manner of burial....... In the absence of a surviving husband or widow the wishes of the next of kin are entitled to be considered with varying weight according to the nearness of the kinship and the personal relations between them and the decedent.” (Italics supplied).

The same views are expressed in Fox v.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 238, 132 Pa. Super. 1, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-cameron-exr-pasuperct-1938.