Schaefer v. West Lawn Memorial Cemetery

352 P.2d 744, 222 Or. 241, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 499
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 352 P.2d 744 (Schaefer v. West Lawn Memorial Cemetery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaefer v. West Lawn Memorial Cemetery, 352 P.2d 744, 222 Or. 241, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 499 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

PERRY, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of two cemetery lots purchased in December, 1954, from the defendants. The conveyance he received contains this recital: “these lots are in a restricted area and markers must be purchased through the cemetery.” This recital conforms with a prior regulation of the cemetery association.

The defendant West Lawn Memorial Cemetery is a non-profit association, incorporated under the laws *243 of the state of Oregon in October, 1947. The other defendants named herein are officers of said association. In this opinion we will refer to the defendants as the “association.”

The cemetery grounds consist of an old section and a new section. In the old section the markers may be of any material, size and style, and a lot owner may purchase them directly from any manufacturer.

The new section is apparently of the lawn type, providing for perpetual care of the burial area by the association, and a sinking fund is provided for this purpose. The association’s regulations require that all grave markers in the new section be set flush with the surface of the ground, be uniform as to size, either 12 inches by 24 inches or .12 inches by 48 inches, and be of cast bronze or granite. The regulations further provide, as was set out in plaintiff’s conveyance, that all markers must be purchased through the association.

We are concerned in this suit only with the regulations affecting the new section of the cemetery.

In March, 1957, plaintiff purchased from Eugene Granite and Marble Works a stone to be set as a marker for a grave on one of the plaintiff’s lots. The marker in all respects met the uniform requirements of the association, but placement upon the lot was refused because the marker was not purchased through the association.

The plaintiff brought this suit to restrain the association from refusing to permit the setting and use of the purchased monument. From an adverse decree of the trial court plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence discloses that this same monument which plaintiff purchased could be delivered and set *244 by the marble works in the Eugene vicinity for $80 and would cost $92.75 if purchased through the association. The lot owner is not restricted in his selection of the manufacturer, but the purchase from the manufacturer selected must be made by and through the association. The association does not manufacture markers, but, when not directed otherwise by the purchaser of a lot, obtains them wholesale from the manufacturer. If the owner of the lot does not express his preference as to the manufacturer, the association makes the selection itself.

The defendant cemetery association was incorporated October 16, 1947, under § 99.1901, et seq., OCLA, which was revised in 1953, and at the time the plaintiff purchased the lots December 13, 1954, was OES 64.010, et seq., the pertinent parts of which read:

OES 64.040 (now OES 61.755):

“The association may purchase or take * * * and hold lands exempt from execution and taxation * * * and may sell it in lots, if intended to be used exclusively for burial purposes, and in no wise with a view to the profit of the members of such association * *

OES 64.050 (now OES 61.760):

“The association may, by its bylaws, provide that a stated percentage of the money received from the sale of lots, donations or other sources of revenue shall constitute an irreducible fund * * *. After paying for the land, all future receipts and income of the association, * * * whether from the sale of lots, donations, rents or otherwise, shall be applied exclusively to laying out, preserving, protecting and embellishing the cemetery * * (Italics ours)

*245 OES 97.710:

“(1) The cemetery authority may make and enforce rules and regulations for:
“(a) the use, care, control, management, restriction and protection of its cemetery;
# * * #
“(c) Eegulating the uniformity, class and kind of all markers, monuments and other structures within its cemetery;
a* * * * *
“(j) All other purposes deemed necessary by the cemetery authority for proper conduct of its business and the protection and safeguarding of the premises and the principles, plans and ideals on which the cemetery ivas organized.”

The conveyance of a cemetery lot does not vest in the grantee a fee simple title, but rather a right in realty which is sui generis (unique in itself). Principally, it grants to the purchaser the right of burial therein exclusive of others, and a right to the living “to express their affection and respect for those dead by marking and decorating the place of interment.” Mansker v. Astoria, 100 Or 435, 454, 198 P 199.

These rights, however, are deemed by the courts to be subject to reasonable rules and regulations by a cemetery association. Mansker v. Astoria, supra.

The plaintiff in this case agreed when he purchased these lots to purchase the markers used thereon through the association. He makes no complaint as to the reasonableness of the requirement that the markers should be of certain material, uniform in size and shape and set flush with the ground. His quarrel is with the requirement that they be purchased through the association. Plaintiff states this requirement is an unreasonable regulation, lies beyond the powers *246 granted the association, i.e., ultra vires, and is in restraint of trade.

As pointed ont in the case of Mansker v. Astoria, supra, 100 Or 435, 455, “* * * The authorities agree that all rules and regulations adopted by the proprietor of the cemetery must be equal, uniform and reasonable. * * * The authorities do not always agree, however, that a given rule is reasonable.”

If the requirement of the purchase of a marker through the association is such that it would deprive the purchaser of the right to properly mark the grave of loved ones, there can be little question but that any court would consider this regulation unreasonable and unenforcible.

The representatives of the association testified, in general, that the income received through this requirement was placed in a fund to provide for perpetual care of the lots in the new portion of the cemetery and, also, that requiring the purchase to be made through the association assured the uniformity of the markings placed upon the lots.

There is no evidence that the slight difference in charge made by purchasing through the association instead of directly from the manufacturer was, as to amount, unreasonable. Nor do we think this slight charge can be used as a guise to state that as such it would deprive an owner of properly marking the graves of loved ones.

The Pennsylvania Superior Court in Dries v.

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Bluebook (online)
352 P.2d 744, 222 Or. 241, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaefer-v-west-lawn-memorial-cemetery-or-1960.