Page v. Symonds

63 N.H. 17
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 N.H. 17 (Page v. Symonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Symonds, 63 N.H. 17 (N.H. 1883).

Opinion

Cl auk, J.

The law requires every town to provide a suitable public cemetery, and subjects it to such regulations as the town may establish. When there is a public necessity for the establish *18 ment of a new cemetery, and land necessary therefor cannot. be obtained in a suitable place at a reasonable price by contract with the owner, the selectmen, upon petition therefor, may lay out a cemetery and appraise the damage to the land-owner. All proceedings upon such petition, and the return and record of such proceedings, and the remedy of a land-owner, if he is dissatisfied with the location or the damages awarded, are the same as in cases of highways laid out by selectmen. When there is a public necessity for the discontinuance of a cemetery and the removal of the remains buried in it, it may be discontinued upon like notice, proceedings, return, and record, and subject to the same right of appeal, as in case of the discontinuance of highways. And the selectmen may, prudently, and with all proper care and attention, and at the expense of the town, remove the remains from the discontinued cemetery to a suitable cemetery, and may carefully remove $11 monuments, gravestones, and other appurtenances5 with as little injury as the nature of the case will admit, and at the expense of the town. In case of injury to any such monument, gravestone, or other appurtenance, the town pays all damages; and all proceedings relating to the removal of remains and other things, and for obtaining increased damages, are the same as in the case of the discontinuance of highways, and subject to the same right of appeal. The removal is made to any public cemetery in the town, and in such unoccupied part of it as is designated by tbe nearest surviving relatives of the deceased. No cemetery is discontinued or removals made unless the town by a three-fourths vote first vote in favor of a discontinuance or removal. G. L., e. 49, ss. 1-4.

The defendants are the selectmen of Lisbon. At a legal town-meeting, held April 28, 1883, the town voted to discontinue, the cemetery where the plaintiff’s relatives are buried, and to remove the bodies buried therein. The plaintiff was present at the meeting and spoke in opposition to the measure, which was carried by a vote of two hundred to two hundred and fifty in the affirmative and about fifty in the negative. The cemetery contains one acre of land, conveyed- to the town of Lisbon in 1846 in trust for a public burial-place. It is located in Lisbon village, within ten rods of the B., C. & M. Railroad. In 1846 the village was much smaller than now, and the railroad was not built. About 1863 dissatisfaction began to be expressed as to the size and situation of the cemetery, and the unsuitable character of the soil, a part' being ledgy and a part wet. It was apparent that enlarged and better accommodations would soon be needed, and in 1867 a new cemetery, containing eight acres, was established upon a site suitable for the purpose and further from the village. Since that time the new cemetery has been chiefly used as a place of burial, only six interments having been made in the old cemetery during the last thirteen years. Previous to the vote of discontinuance, about one *19 hundred and twenty-five bodies had been removed from the old to the new cemetery, leaving about fifty graves from which the bodies had not been removed, all of which have since been removed except four, which are soon to be removed, and the bodies of the plaintiff’s deceased parents and brother, buried- in August, 1865, March, 1866, and October, 1882. In consequence of the removals from the old cemetery and its disuse as a place of burial, and the general conviction that its discontinuance was only a question of time, the fences had been allowed to decay, bushes had grown up, and the ground had become uneven, so that as a place of burial for the dead it was regarded as not creditable to the town.

The plaintiff claims that there was no public necessity for the discontinuance of the cemetery, that he has not received legal notice of the contemplated removal of the remains of his relatives, and that there have not been such proceedings, return, or record, on the part of the selectmen as are required by law, so that he could be heard or his rights protected. After the vote of discontinuance, the plaintiff was requested by the selectmen to select a spot in the new cemetery, and remove the bodies of his deceased relatives. No record or return of the action of the town has been made, except the record of the meeting kept by the town-clerk in the records of the town. The plaintiff also claims that no law authorizing a discontinuance of the cemetery existed when his mother and brother were buried in 1865 and 1866, and that an application of the statute authorizing such discontinuance to this case is in conflict with the provision of the constitution of the United States, that no state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.

In determining whether an injunction shall issue, it is necessary to consider what rights of the plaintiff are imperilled. There is no allegation of title or ownership in the soil of the cemetery, nor is there any suggestion of any right acquired by purchase or secured by express contract. The facts, so far as they appear, furnish no evidence of any right except such as may be incident to the right of interment in a public cemetery. Such right of burial is not an absolute right of property, but a privilege or license, to be enjoyed so long as the place continues to be used as a burial-ground, subject to municipal regulation and control, and legally revocable whenever the public necessity requires. It is a right of limited use for purposes of interment, which gives no title to the land. Craig v. First Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh, 88 Penn. St. 42; Windt v. German Reformed Church, 4 Sandf. Ch. 471. A grant of a lot in a cemetery is said to be analogous to a grant of a pew in a meeting-house, and the right of burial in a public burying-ground in some respects resembles the right of pew tenancy. Jones v. Towne, 58 N. H. 462; Sohier v. Trinity Church, 109 Mass. 1, 21; Kincaid's Appeal, 66 Penn. St. 411.

Strictly speaking there is no right of property in a dead body. *20 2 Bl. Com. 429 ; In re Beekman St, 4 Bradf. 503; Weld v. Walker, 130 Mass. 422; 4 Am. L. Rev. 57. But while it is not property in the ordinary- sense of the term, it is regarded as property so far as to entitle the relatives to legal protection from unnecessary disturbance and wantpn violation or invasion of its place of burial. The plaintiff, notwithstanding he is neither the owner of the soil of the cemetery nor of the remains of his deceased relatives interred there, may nevertheless be «authorized to invoke protection against, unnecessary desecration of their place of burial. Meagher v. Driscoll, 99 Mass. 281; Pierce v. Swan Point Cemetery, 10 R. I. 227; Smith v. Thompson, 55 Md. 5; Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Pet. 566, 584; Cool. Torts 239 .

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.H. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-symonds-nh-1883.