Spiess v. Greenwood Development Co., Inc.
This text of 542 So. 2d 810 (Spiess v. Greenwood Development Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Catherine SPIESS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GREENWOOD DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC. Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*811 Walter L. Comeaux, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.
Gary Nunn, Alexandria, for defendant-appellee.
A.J. Gregory, Jr., Natchitoches, for defendant-intervenor.
Before GUIDRY, STOKER and KING, JJ.
KING, Judge.
This appeal presents for our consideration the issues of whether or not the intervenors in this suit have a right of action under LSA-R.S. 8:659 to oppose plaintiff's request to have her deceased son's remains exhumed and removed to another city and whether or not the trial court abused its discretion in finding there was no reason to disturb the deceased son's final resting place and in dismissing plaintiff's suit.
Catherine Speiss (hereinafter sometimes referred to as plaintiff), the sole surviving parent of the decedent, Edwin Speiss (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the decedent), filed suit against Greenwood Development Company, Inc. to have the remains of the decedent disinterred and removed from Rapides Parish, Louisiana to Orleans Parish, Louisiana where she resides and where the decedent's father is buried. Plaintiff alleged in her petition that the burial of the decedent in Rapides Parish, Louisiana was contrary to her wishes and has worked a substantial hardship on her. Plaintiff subsequently filed an amended petition to substitute Kramer Development Company (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the defendant) as the proper party defendant. Plaintiff alleges that defendant opposed her request to disinter and remove the remains of the decedent. Defendant answered and admitted it opposed plaintiff's request to exhume and remove the decedent's remains.
The executor and executrix of decedent's succession, Reverend James W. Dollar and his wife, Judy Everett Dollar, filed a Petition of Intervention seeking to prevent the transfer of the decedent's remains. Thereafter, plaintiff filed an exception of no right of action, challenging their standing to intervene in this matter. After trial on the merits, the trial court dismissed plaintiff's suit at her cost. From this judgment, plaintiff perfected a timely devolutive appeal. We affirm.
FACTS
Edwin Speiss, the decedent, was born and raised in Alexandria, Louisiana. He was the only child of Edwin Spiess, Sr., and the plaintiff, Catherine Spiess. The decedent was married in the City of Alexandria, Louisiana to Carolyn Everett, also a resident of Alexandria, Louisiana, and they had one child, Kristen Marie. The elder Mr. Spiess passed away in 1963 and was buried in New Orleans, Louisiana. Plaintiff moved to New Orleans in 1965. The decedent graduated from L.S.U., spent time in the Army, and he and his wife, Carolyn, then settled in Atlanta, Georgia, where he became a successful architect. On December 27, 1983, the decedent, his wife, and child were killed in a tragic automobile accident in Alabama.
The decedent and his wife, Carolyn, executed wills appointing Carolyn's sister, Judy Everett Dollar, and her husband, Reverend James W. Dollar, both of whom are residents of Mississippi, as executor and executrix of both of their estates. Their wills apparently directed that they wanted a funeral service and a monument on their graves, but did not specify where they should be buried. Consequently, when Carolyn's family in Alexandria, Louisiana received notification of the deaths of the decedent, Carolyn, and Kristen, they attempted to contact plaintiff by telephone in New Orleans, Louisiana to inform her of the deaths and to discuss possible burial sites. After several unsuccessful calls *812 were made, Carolyn's family had the bodies transported to Alexandria, Louisiana.
Approximately two days after the accident, Carolyn's family contacted the Catholic Church the plaintiff attended in New Orleans. They requested that a priest inform her of the accident and of their attempts to reach her. After she received notification, plaintiff called Alexandria and spoke with Reverend Dollar and Nancy Jordan, another of Carolyn's sisters, about the funeral arrangements. Plaintiff did not object at that time to the burial of her son and his family in Alexandria. However, she did request that they be buried in a mausoleum rather than under the ground. Pursuant to plaintiff's request, a mausoleum was chosen in Greenwood Memorial Gardens in Alexandria and there the decedent, his wife, and daughter were laid to rest.
Plaintiff has been unable to visit the gravesites in Alexandria because of advanced age and ill health. For this reason she contacted the defendant, Kramer Development Company, Inc., the cemetery authority that manages Greenwood Memorial Gardens, to obtain their voluntary consent to have the decedent's remains disinterred and transferred to Lake Lawn Mausoleum in New Orleans, where the decedent's father is buried. The defendant cemetery authority refused to give their voluntary consent, and plaintiff filed suit on January 28, 1987 to obtain a judgment of court to permit the exhumation and removal of the decedent's remains from the defendant's cemetery. This suit was filed over three years after the decedent was buried. The defendant answered the suit and admitted it had not given its consent to plaintiff's request to remove the decedent's remains.
On May 26, 1987, Reverend Dollar and Judy Dollar filed a petition of intervention in opposition to plaintiff's request, alleging that it would not be in the best interest of the decedent's family unit to have the decedent's remains located in a different cemetery than that of his wife and child.
A trial on the merits was held on September 29, 1987. Plaintiff filed an exception of no right of action, prior to the beginning of the trial, to the intervention, claiming that she alone possessed legal capacity under LSA-R.S. 8:659 to assert any interest in the final resting place of her son's remains. The trial court allowed the filing of the exception and took the exception under advisement. After hearing testimony on the issue of whether the decedent's remains should be disinterred and removed, the trial court then took the matter under advisement.
On November 8, 1987, the trial judge rendered written reasons for judgment and found that Alexandria, Louisiana was the most appropriate burial site for the decedent and that he could see no reason for disturbing his final resting place. The trial judge did not rule on plaintiff's exception of no right of action to the intervention. On November 19, 1987, a written judgment was signed in favor of Kramer Development Company, Inc., Reverend James W. Dollar and Judy Everett Dollar, and against Catherine Spiess dismissing her suit. It is from this judgment that plaintiff devolutively appeals.
While the record does not reflect that judgment was ever rendered disposing of the exception of no right of action it is apparent, from the trial court's judgment, that the court determined Reverend and Mrs. Dollar did in fact have an interest in the litigation and were entitled to intervene in order to act in the best interest of the decedent. The jurisprudence is settled that all of the issues presented by the pleadings and on which evidence has been offered will be considered as having been disposed of by final judgment in the cause, and any demand passed over in silence will be considered rejected by implication. Webster v. Terrebonne Parish Council, 515 So.2d 461 (La.App. 1 Cir.1987), writ den., 516 So.2d 368 (La.1988); Miller v. Miller, 480 So.2d 789 (La.App.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
542 So. 2d 810, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 714, 1989 WL 37020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiess-v-greenwood-development-co-inc-lactapp-1989.