Plummer v. District of Columbia Board of Funeral Directors

730 A.2d 159, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 115, 1999 WL 314647
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1999
Docket95-AA-864
StatusPublished

This text of 730 A.2d 159 (Plummer v. District of Columbia Board of Funeral Directors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plummer v. District of Columbia Board of Funeral Directors, 730 A.2d 159, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 115, 1999 WL 314647 (D.C. 1999).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge:

Petitioners are two officers and an employee of the John T. Rhines Company, a District of Columbia funeral home. They seek review of a decision of the Board of Funeral Directors (“the Board”) which imposed civil fines and damages against them for breaching a funeral services contract *160 with Marian Washington, whose husband had recently died. Following a hearing, the Board ruled that petitioners had “failed to provide funeral goods or services specified in the contract,” in violation of 17 DCMR § 3013.2 (i)(24) (1990), 1 when they failed to remove a catheter tube from the decedent’s penis and failed to embalm and prepare the body properly for shipment to Texas for burial, thus making it necessary for another funeral home in Texas to re-embalm and re-dress the body before it could be buried.

Before this court petitioners make three arguments. First, they contend that there was insufficient evidence to support the Board’s decision; second, they maintain that the Board’s decision is invalid because it was not rendered within ninety days after the hearing; and third, they assert that the Board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious because the government conducted its investigation in a negligent manner. We agree with the first contention, and thus we reverse the Board’s ruling without reaching the second and third arguments.

I

A. Factual Background

Vernon Washington was a patient at Walter Reed Army Hospital when he died on June 21, 1990, of chronic liver disease and related ailments. His widow, Marian Washington, contacted the John T. Rhines Company (“Rhines”) to make arrangements for the preparation and shipping of her husband’s body to El Paso, Texas, where he was to be buried at Fort Bliss National Cemetery. Mrs. Washington entered into a written contract with Rhines which required Rhines to embalm and dress her husband’s body, provide professional care, and ship the body by air to an El Paso funeral home.

On June 25 the body was shipped to El Paso, where it was received by employees of the Banks, Marlin & Johnson Funeral Home (“Banks”). According to a memorandum prepared by Harrison Johnson, a funeral director at Banks, the body was in poor condition and smelled of embalming and other offensive bodily fluids when it arrived in El Paso. 2

After picking up the body at the airport, Mr. Johnson contacted Mrs. Washington and asked her to come to the Banks Funeral Home to examine her husband’s remains. When she arrived, Mrs. Washington was advised that the body should be re-embalmed. She agreed to this, and Banks proceeded to disinfect and re-embalm the body. Photographs were taken of the body both before and after the re-embalming procedure. The funeral then took place, and Mr. Washington was buried at Fort Bliss.

On July 15, 1992, Mrs. Washington filed a complaint against Rhines with the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (“DCRA”). She alleged, inter alia, that Rhines had used unprofessional and incompetent embalming techniques which had resulted in the premature deterioration of her husband’s body. She asked that the Board of Funeral Directors discipline Rhines and either revoke or suspend the licenses of Rhines’ *161 directors. 3 After an investigation, the Board notified the three petitioners of its intent to take disciplinary action against them. Each of the petitioners was charged with (1) gross negligence in the practice of funeral directing, in violation of D.C.Code § 2 — 2808(a)(11) (1994); (2) failing to treat human remains with dignity and respect, in violation of 17 DCMR § 3013.2 (i)(21) (1990); and (3) failing to provide funeral goods or services as specified in the funeral contract, in violation of 17 DCMR § 3013.2 (Z)(24) (1990).

B. The Evidence at the Hearing

The government’s primary witness at the hearing before the Board 4 was Marian Washington. She testified that she had contacted Rhines immediately after her husband’s death and that she met later with a secretary at the funeral home and discussed plans for sending the body to Texas. Mrs. Washington said that she was not warned of any special precautions that might be necessary to prepare the body for shipment, and that she later signed a contract which'authorized Rhines to embalm her husband’s body and ship it to El Paso. The contract required Rhines to “forward the remains to another funeral home ... [and to provide] embalming and professional care.” Mrs. Washington paid Rhines $767.00 for the embalming and $315.00 for shipping. Although she did not personally view her husband’s body before shipment, she testified that her daughters and several other relatives had done so.

Upon her arrival in El Paso, a Banks representative told Mrs. Washington that her husband’s body was deteriorating and asked her to come to the funeral home to examine it. Accompanied by her grandson, Mrs. Washington went to the funeral home and saw that although her husband had been light-skinned, his body had become “dark” and his fingers were purple. The suit in which the body had been shipped had been removed, but when it was shown to her, she discovered that it was “soaking wet.” She authorized Banks to disinfect and re-embalm her husband’s body in preparation for an open-casket service.

Mrs. Washington’s daughter, Alta Wright, testified that she had seen her stepfather’s body both before and immediately after his death and that she initially failed to recognize him at the Rhines Funeral Home because his skin color following the embalming was darker than usual. After being advised that the embalming process could change a person’s skin color, Ms. Wright told her mother that the body appeared to be “okay” because she did not want to upset her mother any more than necessary. At the funeral in Texas, Ms. Wright noticed that her stepfather’s body looked better than when she had first seen it at the Rhines Funeral Home, but it still appeared “distorted.”

The government’s final witness was Cheryl Eason, a DCRA employee who investigated Mrs. Washington’s complaint. She testified that at the time of Mr. Washington’s death, petitioners Robert and Hazel Plummer were the president and vice president, respectively, of the Rhines Company and that petitioner Smith was a licensed funeral director employed by Rhines. Ms. Eason said that, according to Mr. Washington’s death certificate, which was signed by Juan Smith, he had been embalmed by Mr. Smith.

Robert Plummer testified that he was responsible for the quality of goods and services provided at the Rhines Funeral Home at the time of Mr. Washington’s death. 5 Hazel Plummer testified that she *162 was a licensed funeral director and that, although she was responsible for the daily operations at Rhines, she was not present when Mr. Washington was embalmed, nor when Alta Wright came later to view the body. Mrs. Plummer stated that she had examined Mr.

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646 A.2d 345 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1994)
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590 A.2d 1043 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
730 A.2d 159, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 115, 1999 WL 314647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-district-of-columbia-board-of-funeral-directors-dc-1999.