Johnson v. Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Ass'n

9 N.W.2d 385, 233 Iowa 427
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 4, 1943
DocketNo. 46133.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 N.W.2d 385 (Johnson v. Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Ass'n, 9 N.W.2d 385, 233 Iowa 427 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

*428 Garfield, C. J.

The principal question presented is whether plaintiff may erect a granite marker at the grave of his wife notwithstanding a rule of defendant cemetery that if any markers are used they must be of bronze.

Upon a former appeal we held the lower court erred in striking paragraphs 1 to 5 of plaintiff’s reply to defendant’s answer and that plaintiff was entitled to offer proof in support of at least some of the allegations in each of these paragraphs. Johnson v. Cedar Memorial Park Assn., 229 Iowa 749, 295 N. W . 136. Although plaintiff filed an amended reply following that decision, our opinion discloses the general nature of the pleaded issues.

Defendant is an Iowa corporation organized for profit, owning and operating a cemetery of 72.6 acres of the “memorial park” type in Cedar Rapids. Burials in the cemetery commenced in 1929 when the property was owned by a Kansas corporation bearing the same name. The Iowa corporation was later formed and in December 1937, took over the business and assets of its predecessor. The cemetery represents an investment of several hundred thousand dollars. A mausoleum was erected at a cost of about $140,000. Numerous pictures of the cemetery, received In evidence, are before us and indicate it is one of unusual beauty. 1

. Plaintiff’s wife died on April. 25, 1939. On the same day plaintiff entered into a written contract to purchase from defendant for $220 half a cemetery lot with room for three burials. The -contract provided:

‘ ‘ Permanent markers, while not required, are encouraged as a permanent means of identification, and in order to perpetuate the beauty and continuity of the Cemetery only Bronze Markers purchased through this Cemetery Association will be permitted. * iJ: *
“All lots are sold with full perpetual care included in the purchase price' and subject to the Rules and Regulations of The Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Association, as the same are now in forae, or * * * hereafter amended and added to. ’■’

Mrs. Johnson was buried on this half lot on April 27th. *429 On May 19, 1939, defendant delivered to .plaintiff a deed to his half lot. The deed provided:

“The above conveyance is * * =::‘ subject to the rules and regulations of The Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery Association, as the same are now in force, or * # * hereafter amended and added to * * ® and the grantee herein in accepting this conveyance binds himself, heirs and assigns to comply with and abide by such rules and regulations. ’ ’

On January 28, 1935, the Kansas corporation through its stockholders had duly adopted a regulation providing that there would be no monuments in the cemetery; that the siirface of grave markers must be level with the surrounding turf; that only bronze markers would be permitted except that markers of light Barre granite with hammered finish and sunken letters ivould be allowed on lots where such granite markers had been previously installed, * * but in no event, will such granite markers be allowed on any burial spaces sold by this Association on or after November 1, 1934. * * * To provide for the future beauty of the Cemetery from uniformity of bronze markers and to safeguard lot owners against inferior quality, only bronze markers purchased from this Association .will be permitted. ’ ’

Following acquisition by defendant of the Kansas corporation, the above regulation and others were on March 31, 1938, adopted by appropriate action of defendant’s board of directors. The rule has been in force at all subsequent times.

Notwithstanding the terms of plaintiff’s contract and deed and the rule forbidding granite markers, plaintiff on May 20, 1939, contracted with one Anderson, a monument dealer, for a light Barre granite marker which was delivered at the cemetery. Defendant refused to permit its installation at Mrs. Johnson’s grave and returned it to Anderson. This suit followed. Defendant contended in the court below, as here, (1) that plaintiff is bound by the rule prohibiting granite markers because of the terms of the contract and deed under which he claims and (2) that the rule is reasonably necessary to promote beauty and uniformity in the cemetery. Plaintiff, however, has claimed throughout that (1) he may attack the rule as unreasonable notwithstanding he took his title subject thereto and (2) the rule *430 is unreasonable and void. The lower court held against plaintiff on both the above issues and also on other issues tendered by plaintiff.

Upon the trial, defendant offered to permit the removal of Mrs. Johnson’s remains and to return to plaintiff the purchase money paid by him upon surrender of his rights of ownership in the ground. Plaintiff refused the offer.

I. We will assume without deciding that plaintiff is in position, notwithstanding the terms of his contract and deed, to attack as unreasonable and arbitrary the rule prohibiting the use of granite markers. It is everywhere recognized that cemetery associations have the right to provide by reasonable rules and regulations, of general and uniform operation, for the improvement and adornment of the cemetery and the lots therein. Chariton Cemetery Co. v. Chariton Granite Works, 197 Iowa 403, 406, 197 N. W. 457, 32 A. L. R. 1402; 10 Am. Jur. 509, section 33; 14 C. J. S. 92, 93, section 33. This is conceded by plaintiff. This right is recognized by section 5566, Code, 1939 (section 587, Code, 1897), which provides:

“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 inclose, improve, and adorn the ground of such 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. ”

Whether any particular rule is reasonable is a question for the court under the evidence. Here plaintiff had the burden to prove that this rule is unreasonable. Plaintiff has cited the Chariton Cemetery Company case, supra, and several decisions from other jurisdictions where certain rules, unlike that involved here, were held to be unreasonable. Many of these decisions are discussed in the annotation to the Chariton case in 32 A. L. R. 1406, and the later annotation in 47 A. L. R. 70 to Scott v. Lakewood Cemetery Assn., 167 Minn. 223, 208 N. W. 811, 47 A. L. R. 64. Many of the cited cases iirrolve regulations *431 which were adopted after the purchase of the burial lot owned' by the complaining individual. In the Chariton ease, apparently the rules were not adopted until after the cemetery had sold the lot against which the rules were sought to be enforced. The distinction is obvious between that class of cases and the present, where the rule is in effect at the time the lot is sold. It is apparent that a rule is more apt to be enforceable if it applies only to lots sold after its adoption. Zimmer v. Congregation Beth Israel, 203 Cal. 203, 263 P. 232; Mansker v. City of Astoria, 100 Or. 435, 198 P. 199, 205, 199 P.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.W.2d 385, 233 Iowa 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-cedar-memorial-park-cemetery-assn-iowa-1943.