Kathy Salyer v. Washington Regular Baptist Church Cemetery, and Kristy Sams

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 2019
Docket19A-PL-243
StatusPublished

This text of Kathy Salyer v. Washington Regular Baptist Church Cemetery, and Kristy Sams (Kathy Salyer v. Washington Regular Baptist Church Cemetery, and Kristy Sams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kathy Salyer v. Washington Regular Baptist Church Cemetery, and Kristy Sams, (Ind. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED Oct 30 2019, 7:55 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT Leanna Weissmann Lawrenceburg, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Kathy Salyer, October 30, 2019 Appellant-Plaintiff, Court of Appeals Case No. 19A-PL-243 v. Appeal from the Ripley Circuit Court Washington Regular Baptist The Honorable Ryan J. King, Church Cemetery, Judge Appellee-Defendant, Trial Court Cause No. 69C01-1703-PL-9 and

Kristy Sams,

Appellee-Intervening Party.

Altice, Judge.

Case Summary

[1] Kathy Salyer filed a complaint against the Washington Regular Baptist Church

Cemetery (the Cemetery) seeking to have a gravesite she purchased returned to

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-243 | October 30, 2019 Page 1 of 14 her after the Cemetery sold the gravesite a second time and another individual

was buried there. Following a bench trial, the trial court awarded Salyer an

open gravesite rather than the gravesite she had purchased over thirty years

prior that had since been mistakenly resold for the burial of another. On

appeal, Salyer presents two issues, which we consolidate and restate as: Did

the trial court abuse its discretion in ordering the Cemetery to provide Salyer

with a different gravesite rather than ordering the Cemetery to have the

individual buried in the gravesite she had previously purchased reinterred

elsewhere so as to restore the gravesite for her use?

[2] We affirm.

Facts & Procedural History

[3] In April 1982, after the death of her first husband, Salyer purchased four

contiguous gravesites in the Cemetery that comprised Lot 14. In August 1982,

Salyer purchased an additional gravesite (Gravesite 15) contiguous to Lot 14 on

its north end. Salyer possessed a Certificate of Ownership for each purchase.

[4] Moving south from Gravesite 15, Salyer’s father was buried in the next site (i.e.,

the northern end of Lot 14), her first husband was buried in the next, the next

site was empty, and Salyer’s second husband was buried in the last gravesite

(i.e., the southern end of Lot 14). Salyer intended to bury her mother in

Gravesite 15 and to have herself buried in the empty site between her first and

second husbands.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-243 | October 30, 2019 Page 2 of 14 [5] In early 2014, Salyer noticed that a person named Lowell Johnson had been

buried in Gravesite 15. Salyer contacted the Cemetery, which eventually

acknowledged that it had made a “mistake” in that it had inadvertently sold

Gravesite 15 twice, first to Salyer (in 1982) and later for the burial of Johnson.

Transcript Vol. 2 at 45. Anita Rahe, who sold Gravesite 15 to Johnson’s family,

testified that Salyer’s purchase of Gravesite 15 was not properly recorded in the

Cemetery’s records and thus, such was overlooked when she was trying to find

an open gravesite for Johnson that was near his family. 1

[6] Salyer also spoke with Tom Brunner, the gravedigger for the Cemetery, who

told her that a mistake in burial occasionally happens, but that, in his

experience, when made aware of the mistake, a cemetery will either give the

aggrieved party a new grave or move the person who was buried in the wrong

grave. Salyer requested that the Cemetery relocate Johnson. However, due to

objections by Johnson’s family, the Cemetery took no action.

[7] On May 18, 2015, Salyer filed a small claims action against the Cemetery

requesting an order that the Cemetery move Johnson and restore Gravesite 15

to her. Kristy Sams, Johnson’s daughter, intervened because she did not want

her father moved. While the action was pending, Salyer’s mother passed away

in December 2015. Because Johnson was already buried in Gravesite 15,

Salyer had to make other arrangements. She decided to have her mother’s

1 Johnson’s father and other family members are buried in the three gravesites directly north of Gravesite 15.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-243 | October 30, 2019 Page 3 of 14 remains cremated and buried in the gravesite with her father. This, however,

did not change Salyer’s desire to have Gravesite 15 returned to her.

[8] At a bench trial on April 15, 2016, the Cemetery acknowledged it had

mistakenly sold Gravesite 15 twice, first to Salyer and then to Johnson’s family,

and that Johnson was buried in Gravesite 15. The small claims court did not

order the Cemetery to move Johnson, but rather, ordered the Cemetery to

refund the seventy-five dollars Salyer paid for Gravesite 15 and give Salyer an

open gravesite directly to the south of Lot 14. Salyer filed a motion to correct

error, claiming the court’s solution was contrary to Ind. Code § 23-14-59-2,

which outlines the duties of a cemetery in the case of a wrongful burial. The

small claims court denied the motion, and Salyer appealed. This court did not

reach the merits of Salyer’s claim, but rather, reversed and remanded for

transfer to the court’s plenary docket, holding that the small claims court lacked

jurisdiction to grant Salyer either a gravesite adjacent to Lot 14 or to order

Johnson to be moved from Gravesite 15 as small claims courts do not have

jurisdiction to order specific performance or injunctive relief. See Salyer v. Wash.

Regular Baptist Church Cemetery, 63 N.E.3d 1091, 1095-96 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016).

[9] On remand, the matter was transferred to the Circuit Court of Ripley County.

The trial court held a bench trial on November 7, 2018. Salyer asserted that,

pursuant to I.C. § 23-14-59-2, the court was required to order that Johnson’s

body be moved from Gravesite 15 to correct the Cemetery’s mistake. The

Cemetery wanted the trial court to fashion an equitable remedy that did not

involve disinterring Johnson. Because Sams did not appear at this hearing, the

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-243 | October 30, 2019 Page 4 of 14 court continued the matter to December 19, 2018, in order to provide her with

an opportunity to make a statement, which she did, requesting that her father

(Johnson) not be moved and permitted to “rest in peace.” Transcript at 107.

[10] On January 15, 2019, the trial court entered its judgment, including the

following relevant findings:

3) Plaintiff Salyer testified that the burial was wrongful and that the [] Cemetery committed the wrongdoing.

4) Cemetery officials testified that Plaintiff Salyer marked off the gravesites, as that was the customary practice, and [Salyer] committed the error. Further, at times Plaintiff Salyer has said that she had marked off her own sites, but at other times she said she had not. Clearly, [Salyer] had involvement with the [Markers]. In sum, the evidence is such that the Court can make no definite determination as to who set the [Markers] – whether it was the [C]emetery or Plaintiff Salyer. Any wrongful burial appears to have flowed from the [M]arkers being mis-set.

5) In addition to the confusion over who set the [M]arkers, is the confusion as to where [Lot] 14 and [Lot] 15 began and/or ended. It appears that an old access road caused significant burial site confusion. This serves to compound the confusion regarding the [M]arkers.

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