Orlando Bethel v. Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory

CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 24, 2023
Docket2022-0787
StatusPublished

This text of Orlando Bethel v. Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory (Orlando Bethel v. Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orlando Bethel v. Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory, (Ala. 2023).

Opinion

Rel: February 24, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.

SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023

_________________________

SC-2022-0787 _________________________

Orlando Bethel

v.

Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory

Appeal from Baldwin Circuit Court (CV-22-900287)

SELLERS, Justice. SC-2022-0787

Orlando Bethel appeals from an order of the Baldwin Circuit Court

denying his motion for a preliminary injunction pursuant to Rule 65, Ala.

R. Civ. P. We reverse and remand.

I. Facts and Procedural History

On February 18, 2022, Zoe Sozo Bethel ("the decedent") died

intestate in Florida; she was survived by her spouse, Brennan James

Franklin ("the spouse"), and their five-year-old daughter. After the

decedent's death, the spouse arranged for the body to be cremated in

Florida and had the cremated remains ("the ashes") shipped to Hughes

Funeral Home and Crematory ("the funeral home") in Alabama, where

the spouse's mother, Mikki Franklin, was employed. Thereafter, a

dispute arose between the spouse and the decedent's father, Orlando

Bethel ("the father"), concerning the right to control the disposition of the

ashes.

On March 8, 2022, the father filed an emergency petition, pursuant

to § 34-13-11(b)(4), Ala. Code 1975, in the Baldwin Probate Court seeking

a determination that the spouse and the decedent had been estranged at

the time of the decedent's death and that the spouse had therefore

forfeited his right as an "authorizing agent" to control the disposition of

2 SC-2022-0787

ashes. The father requested that he, rather than the spouse, be granted

the right to control the disposition of the ashes. While the probate action

was pending, the father filed in the Baldwin Circuit Court a motion for a

temporary restraining order or, alternatively, for a preliminary

injunction enjoining the spouse, the spouse's mother, and the funeral

home ("the defendants") from further "dividing, diminishing, splitting up

or otherwise disposing of" the ashes; the proceeding on the father's

request for injunctive relief was assigned case no. CV-22-900248. The

circuit court entered a five-day temporary restraining order enjoining the

defendants from disposing of the ashes and scheduling a preliminary

hearing on the matter. Thereafter, the funeral home, through its owner,

Benjamin Hughes, Sr., filed a motion requesting that the funeral home

be dismissed from the action; in that motion, Hughes represented, in

relevant part, that he understood that the funeral home could not "take

any action [with regard to the ashes] until the pending Probate Court

action is completed through all of the Court's deliberation and any

subsequent appeals thereto that could possibly follow." Based on that

representation, the father voluntarily moved the circuit court to dismiss

his motion for injunctive relief. Accordingly, the circuit court entered an

3 SC-2022-0787

order dismissing the father's request for injunctive relief filed in case no.

CV-22-900248.

On March 16, 2022, the probate court entered a final order in the

probate action, dismissing the father's petition filed pursuant to § 34-13-

11(b)(4) as moot. The probate court opined that the purpose of § 34-13-11

is "to give direction and/or protection to a funeral home director as to who

has the legal authority to determine the manner in which the remains of

a deceased person may be disposed, i.e., buried or cremated." The probate

court reasoned that, because the decedent's remains had been disposed

of by cremation, the father's request to be awarded the right to control

the disposition of the remains was moot. Accordingly, the probate court

did not address the father's allegation that the spouse and the decedent

had been estranged at the time of the decedent's death.

On March 23, 2022, the father appealed the probate court's order to

the circuit court ("the probate appeal"). That appeal is presently pending

in the circuit court and is not currently before us. In that same action,

the father filed another motion for a preliminary injunction, the denial of

4 SC-2022-0787

which is the subject of this appeal.1 In support of his requested injunctive

relief, the father averred, among other things, that the funeral home had

possession of the ashes and that the spouse had communicated to the

father his intent to "split up" or otherwise dispose of the ashes, which,

the father claimed, would not only "violate the decedent's wishes and her

religious beliefs," but would also constitute a desecration of her ashes.

The father also alleged that Hughes, the owner of the funeral home, had

informed him that the ashes had already been "split up," despite

Hughes's previous representation that the funeral home could take no

action regarding the ashes pending resolution of the issue regarding the

right of disposition. Accordingly, the father requested that the circuit

court enter a preliminary injunction enjoining the defendants from

1On appeal, the defendants unpersuasively argue that the doctrine of res judicata barred the father's second request for injunctive relief. There are four elements of res judicata, all of which must be present for the doctrine to apply: (1) a prior judgment on the merits, (2) rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, (3) involving substantial identity of parties, and (4) involving the same cause of action in both actions. See Benetton S.p.A. v. Benedot, Inc., 642 So. 2d 394, 399 (Ala. 1994). In this case, the defendants have not demonstrated that the order granting the father's motion to voluntarily dismiss case no. CV-22-900248, in which the father had requested injunctive relief, constituted a judgment on the merits. See generally Rule 41, Ala. R. Civ. P. (regarding dismissal of actions). 5 SC-2022-0787

further "dividing, diminishing, splitting up or otherwise disposing of" the

On June 3, 2022, the circuit court held a hearing on the father's

request for a preliminary injunction, at which the father proceeded pro

se. Although the father elicited substantial testimony on the issue of

whether the spouse and the decedent had been estranged, we do not find

that testimony entirely relevant or dispositive of the issues in this appeal.

Nonetheless, the undisputed testimony at the hearing indicated that the

decedent and the spouse had been living apart since the end of 2020 but

that they were still legally married when the decedent died in February

2022. The spouse testified that, after the decedent died, he had her body

cremated and that he wanted to keep the ashes for their minor daughter.

Despite having knowledge of the ongoing dispute regarding the right to

control the disposition of the ashes, the spouse testified that he had

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Orlando Bethel v. Brennan James Franklin, Mikki Franklin, and Hughes Funeral Home and Crematory, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orlando-bethel-v-brennan-james-franklin-mikki-franklin-and-hughes-ala-2023.