Johnson v. Hailey

325 S.W.2d 255, 204 Tenn. 664, 8 McCanless 664, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 325
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 325 S.W.2d 255 (Johnson v. Hailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Hailey, 325 S.W.2d 255, 204 Tenn. 664, 8 McCanless 664, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 325 (Tenn. 1959).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When Dr. C. R. Morrison, a physician of Obion County, died on August 15, 1957, his son, W. M. Morrison, a lawyer in Atlanta, Georgia, appears to have been somewhere in Michigan. This son was the only child and heir at law of decedent. A brother of deceased, the Rev. S. B. Morrison" of Newbern, Tennessee, contacted the undertaker, Eddie Johnson, and made the funeral arrangements, including selection of casket, time and place of services. The entire funeral bill was $872.99, including [666]*666a vault for $200. The estate of Dr. Morrison amounted to about $3,500.

The Rev. Morrison sent the son of deceased, W. M. Morrison, by way of Atlanta the following telegram:

“Your father died last night. Funeral tomorrow 3 P.M.”

This telegram was received by this son about 24 hours before this funeral. It did by necessary implication inform him that his uncle or some one back in Obion County had made funeral arrangements, including procurement of casket, etc. He made no inquiry by phone or otherwise as to what these arrangements were, or to delay them until he arrived. Instead he got in his car and drove to Newbern, arriving there one-half hour, he says before the funeral, after having driven a distance of 900 miles. He necessarily saw the casket, etc. He entered no inquiry, so far as the record indicates.

In due course, the undertaker, Mr. Johnson, filed his claim in the County Court for the merchandise sold and services furnished. That the charges were reasonable is affirmatively established, not denied, and no point made thereof. In fact, this son, W. M. Morrison, representing the administrator in the County Court (which of course amounted to representing himself) states to the Court that quantum meruit was not being relied upon.

Objection was made on the ground that his father had two certificates of $100 each in Burial Associations of which Johnson was secretary and, in fact, owner, for all practical purposes; that the undertaker, Johnson, was under an obligation by the very terms of these certifi[667]*667cates to furnish a $200 burial; hence that the estate is not liable for any amount beyond the $200 with which the undertaker had credited the claim.

The County Judge allowed the undertaker’s claim. The Court of Appeals disallowed it, with the exception of the $200 already paid. The undertaker files this petition for certiorari.

The certificates of membership in the Burial Association issued to Dr. Morrison in 1953 provided that he is entitled to “all the benefits of the association as set forth in the by-laws ’ ’. Section 10 of these by-laws provides that-, the secretary-treasurer of the Association (Johnson, and so named in the by-laws) shall furnish for the burial of a member dying, a casket, service and hearse “up to the standard and in keeping with the caskets and. services sold at a similar price by funeral directors” with the privilege “of selecting the casket as to color, design, etc.”, accorded “the relatives of the deceased member, or those in charge”.

The opinion of the Court of Appeals is that by reason of the above provision “Mr. Johnson was under a contract to bury Dr. Morrison with a respectable funeral service for the price of $200.00 to be paid out of the funds of the two Burial Associations”. (Emphasis supplied.) The foregoing statement of the Court of Appeals is an unintentional overstatement. What was to be furnished for the $200 was such a casket and burial as $200 would procure, measured by “the standard and in keeping with the caskets and services sold at a similar price, by funeral directors”. Whether such a funeral would'be “a respectable funeral service” measured by [668]*668decedent’s station in life and size of estate would, we suppose, depend upon an individual’s opinion thereof.

So, the Court of Appeals says that Mr. Johnson “without authority from the only son and next of kin of the deceased, and acting solely upon the instructions of the surviving’ brother” furnished the $872.99 funeral without making any “effort to communicate with” this son or “to obtain his wishes concerning the type funeral to be furnished his father. Nor did he have any assurance that the son would receive the notice of his father’s death in time to be present at the funeral”. Under those circumstances, says the Court, the undertaker “was not justified in affording the expensive funeral to Dr. Morrison solely upon the instructions of Rev. Morrison”, hence, the County Court’s order allowing the claim to the full amount was modified to allow it only to the extent of the two burial policies. Implicit in the foregoing remarks of the Court of Appeals is its opinion that had the son been in charge he could have legally bound the estate for a more expensive funeral. And this view taken by the Court of Appeals seems to be shared by the attorneys representing the administrator (in reality, the son). In their answer to the petition to rehear in the Court of Appeals these attorneys state this:

“The only cases that would ever allow the transgressor to recover would be those cases in which there would be no chance of getting in touch with the proper parties.”

Brother of deceased got in touch with proper party, who made no response.

The evidence is that the undertaker knew the decedent had a son but he had never seen him. He had known for [669]*669years the decedent’s brother, the Rev. Morrison, and that it was his brother who “gave notice to him of the death”, and made the funeral arrangements, including the selection of the casket, time and place of services; that he relied upon the Rev. Morrison to convey notice of the funeral to relatives of the deceased. Moreover, this son lived in another State. He was located by telegram from his uncle by way of Georgia and forwarded to somewhere in Michigan.

Eliminating for the minute the by-laws of the Burial Association, under the circumstances stated, ought it to be said that the Rev. Morrison was an interloper in making the funeral arrangements?

“The dead must be buried, and any friend, if the matter be not attended to by the family, executor, or administrator, even may authorize an undertaker to attend to the funeral, and the estate of the decedent will be liable for a reasonable amount.” Nashville Trust Co. v. Carr, Tenn.Ch.App. 62 S.W. 204, 205-206.

In Golsen v. Golsen, 127 Ill.App. 84, the right of a brother to arrange for the funeral at the expense of the estate was under the circumstances there existing approved, the Court saying:

“A stranger under certain circumstances, and especially a relative of the deceased, may contract for the funeral of a deceased person and pay for the same, and the expense, if reasonable, will be allowed him.” 35 A.L.R.2d 1407.

Se also Security Bank & Trust Co. v. Costen, 169 Ark. 173, 273 S.W. 705, and Andrade v. Azevedo, 9 Cal.App. 2d 495, 50 P.2d 80. Many more cases citing that rule [670]*670could be cited. In point is Fogg v. Holbrook, 88 Me. 169, 33 A. 792, 33 L.R.A. 660, holding this:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
325 S.W.2d 255, 204 Tenn. 664, 8 McCanless 664, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-hailey-tenn-1959.