Weyl v. Mount Sinai Cemetery Ass'n

12 Pa. D. & C. 439, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 196
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJuly 16, 1929
DocketNo. 13945
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Pa. D. & C. 439 (Weyl v. Mount Sinai Cemetery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weyl v. Mount Sinai Cemetery Ass'n, 12 Pa. D. & C. 439, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 196 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Martin, P. J.,

In the bill filed in this case plaintiff avers that he has been the owner of a lot in Mount Sinai Cemetery since 1913; that the cemetery association is a corporation organized on July 1, .1853, under the laws of Pennsylvania; that he paid $100 for the lot, has complied with all the rules and regulations of the association, and met all payments and assessments required; that his burial-lot has a capacity of four graves, that two persons are now interred there, but there is room for the burial of plaintiff and his wife; that his wife died April 27, 1928, and on the'following day plaintiff was informed by the officers of the defendant association' that the interment of his wife in the cemetery would not be permitted, because she did not possess the qualification required by the charter, which provides that: “The object of this corporation shall be to purchase and provide a proper and suitable place for a cemetery, to divide the same into lots, to sell and dispose of such lots to individuals, societies or congregations, to be used only for the interment of deceased human bodies of those who by birth, profession or public declaration shall have been of the Jewish faith, under such conditions, restrictions, rules and regulations as the association or board of officers may, from time to time, establish for the government of lot-holders, burial of the dead, and visitors to the cemetery;” that plaintiff stated to the officers of the cemetery association that his wife was by birth, profession and public declaration of the Jewish faith; that he was born of Jewish parents, and was married, forty-six years previously to her death, .by a Rabbi; that upon refusal of permission to bury her body in Mount Sinai Cemetery, plaintiff was obliged to purchase a lot and buried her in another cemetery; that the Mount Sinai Cemetery Association is not a religious institution or connected with any religious institution; it has always been conducted for profit, and the lots in the cemetery have greatly increased in value; that the plaintiff is deprived of the privilege of being buried by the side of his wife and of a son, who is buried in the cemetery.

The bill contains prayers for a mandatory injunction to restrain the officers and superintendent of the association from interfering with the interment of plaintiff’s wife in the lot which he owns in the cemetery.

Defendant filed an answer admitting ownership of the lot by plaintiff, the incorporation of the defendant association, compliance by plaintiff with the rules and regulations, and the payment of all charges and assessments required. It is admitted that the lot has a capacity of four graves, and that only two bodies are now buried there; that it was the intention of plaintiff to bury the body of his wife in the lot; that his wife was born of Jewish [440]*440parents and had been married to plaintiff for a long time; that plaintiff buried the body of his wife in another cemetery, and that the cemetery association is not a religious institution. The answer also avers that the wife of plaintiff, at the time of her death and long prior thereto, had severed her affiliations with the Jewish faith and became a member of the Church of Christ Scientist; that the burial in this cemetery of a person not of the Jewish faith is contrary to the charter of the association and to its rules and regulations; that the constitution, by-laws, rules and regulations of the association have at all times been made to conform to conservative thought and opinions of the Jewish faith; and that the cemetery has from the time of its organization been so conducted that no person other than a person of the Jewish faith at the time of his or her death was knowingly permitted to be buried in the cemetery; that a person who became a member of the Church of Christ Scientist renounced and severed affiliation with the Jewish faith, even though born of Jewish parents; that this fact was known to plaintiff at the time he purchased the lot; that when he presented the request for permission to bury his wife in the cemetery, he was asked to sign a written statement that his wife was by birth of the Jewish faith and not affiliated with or a member of any other religious denomination or organization at the time of her decease; that he refused to sign the statement, and admitted that his wife was a member of the Church of Christ Scientist.

Findings of fact.

1. The defendant, the Mount Sinai Cemetery Association of Pennsylvania, is a corporation organized on July 1, 1853, under the laws of Pennsylvania. The charter provides that: “The object of this corporation shall be to purchase and provide a proper and suitable place for a cemetery, to divide the same into lots, to sell and dispose of such lots to individuals, societies or congregations, to be used only for the interment of deceased human bodies of those who by birth, profession or public declaration shall have been of the Jewish faith, under such conditions, restrictions, rules and regulations as the association or board of officers may, from time to time, establish for the government of lot-holders, burial of the dead, and visitors to the cemetery.” The association has always been under the exclusive management of persons of the Jewish faith, but is not connected with any religious institution.

2. On April 7, 1913, plaintiff purchased a lot in the cemetery and received a deed certifying “that Simon Weyl is entitled to lot number 3014, Section XVII, of the Mount Sinai Cemetery Association of Pennsylvania, subject to the rules and regulations and also to the payments and assessments thereon, and transferable only in person or by attorney at the Board of the Association.” The lot has a capacity of four graves. Two bodies are now interred in the lot.

3. The plaintiff is of the Jewish faith. His wife was born a Jewess, and they were married by a Rabbi. Some years before her death she joined the Church of Christ Scientist, and thereby repudiated her Jewish faith. The doctrines of the Church of Christ Scientist are at variance with those of the Jewish faith. She continued a member of the Church of Christ Scientist until her death, April 27, 1928.

4. Plaintiff was refused permission to bury his wife in his lot in the cemetery of the defendant association because of the charter provision. At the time of the application for a permit, a form of declaration was submitted for his signature, reciting that his deceased wife “was by birth of the Jewish faith, and was not affiliated with or a member of any other religious denom[441]*441ination or organization at the time of her decease.” This statement he refused to sign.

5. On May 24, 1928, the defendant association adopted a resolution that: “The following regulations are formulated and will govern, and interments shall be granted only to those (A) who by birth shall have been of the Jewish faith, upon the certification of their next of kin or other close relative or friend, conversant with the facts, that the decedent was not affiliated with any other religious denomination or organization at the time of his or her decease; (B) who, though not of the Jewish faith, shall have become a Jew or Jewess,, by formal acceptance into Judaism by an authorized Rabbi, according to the prescribed rabbinical rites. Evidence thereof must be submitted, either by a certificate of said Rabbi, to be lodged with this association, or by an affidavit or certificate of decedent’s next of kin or other close relative or friend, conversant with the facts, and attesting thereto.”

6.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Pa. D. & C. 439, 1929 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyl-v-mount-sinai-cemetery-assn-pactcomplphilad-1929.