DocketNumber: No. 5000
Citation Numbers: 215 S.W. 222
Judges: Morrow, Ordinance, Prendergast, Valid
Filed Date: 5/29/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The governing body of the city of Sherman enacted an ordinance of which section 3 is as follows:
“That if any person whomsoever shall hereafter dig, attend, dress, or keep any grave or burial lot in West Hill Cemetery, in the city of Sherman, for compensation, paid or to be paid, directly or indirectly, except under the direction and with the consent of the superintendent of said cemetery to be appointed as provided by this ordinance, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not less than one dollar nor more than ten dollars. Provided, that nothing in this ordinance shall prevent the owner of any lot, or the relative within the third degree of any person buried in any lot, in said cemetery, from doing work upon or connected with any such lot.”
The relator is under conviction for violation of the ordinance, and seeks release on original application for habeas corpus, claiming that the ordinance is void. The caption of the ordinance is as follows:
“An ordinance providing for the proper care of West Hill Cemetery, making it a misdemeanor for persons other than employes of the city of Sherman to do any work therein for the purpose of digging graves or dressing and keeping the lots therein. And prescribing a penalty therefor.”
“One of these rights is the privilege of interring therein the bodies of her dead by her own hand, if she likes, or by the hand of such sympathetic neighbors or friends as may volunteer their service, or by whom she may employ for that purpose. The city may by ordinance establish such regulations concerning the manner of digging the grave, its depth, etc., and the interment, as are reasonable in their character and necessary for the protection of the public health and welfare, and she or those who make the grave for her must conform to such regulations. Her right, however, to make a grave in her own lot, and inter therein the body of her deceased daughter, canndt, by ordinance, be made dependent upon the permission of the city sexton, nor can he claim by virtue of the ordinance exclusive right to make the grave for her, even for reasonable compensation. The appellant was acting at the request of Mrs. Rush, and, as she might lawfully do by another that which she might lawfully do herself, he cannot be held amenable to an ordinance that was not effective as to her.”
Touching an ordinance in some respects similar to the one in question, we are referred by respondent to the case of State v. Scoville, 78 Conn. 90, 61 Atl. 63, which tends to support the theory of the validity of the terms of the ordinance in question. It is illustrative, however, of the fact that the decisions of courts upon the subject are not in complete harmony.
The New York case of Johnstown v. Parker, 28 Misc. Rep. 280, 59 N. Y. Supp. 821, and 45 App. Div. 55, 60 N. Y. Supp. 1015, passed on and held invalid an ordinance in practically the same terms as the one in question, and one quite similar was held unreasonable by the Supreme Court of California in the case of Los Angeles v. Hollywood Cemetery Ass’n, 124 Cal. 344, 57 Pac. 153, 71 Am. St. Rep. 75. Others in line are Silverwood v. Latrobe, 68 Md. 620, 13 Atl. 161, and State v. Chicago, 68 Minn. 381, 71 N. W. 400, 38 L. R. A. 672, 64 Am. St. Rep. 482.
It was charged against relator that she did dig, attend, and keep the grave and burial lot of Mrs. A. C. Gutecase for compensation without the consent of the superintendent ; she, relator, not being the owner of the lot nor related to the persons buried therein. The owner of the lot, Mrs. Gutecase, having the right of sepulture, possessed the privilege of keeping and attending the grave and burial lot, observing all reasonable regulations with reference to the character of the work done, and the possession of such privilege carried with it the authority to employ another to do therein the things that she might lawfully herself do. There is no complaint that relator, in the performance of the work, was transgressing any reasonable regulation with reference to its character, or was doing anything that might not have been lawfully done by the owner. The ordinance and conviction are based upon the theory that the privilege of .the owner of the lot to attend it might be lawfully restricted to personal attention, and that the right to do so by an agent might he arbitrarily denied by the superintendent of the cemetery. The ordinance fixes no standard of compensation to the superintendent, nor rule to determine what is required to obtain his consent to attend the lot through an agent. We believe that one having the right of sepulture, desiring to mark or beautify the grave of one to whom he is drawn by ties of respect, kinship or sympathy, may exercise the privilege of responding to these sentiments either in person or through the agency of another of his own selection, observing always the reasonable regulations as to the character of the means used in the care of the grave of his •dead, and the agent performing this service being engaged in a useful and harmless avo.cation, and performing an act wjiich' his principal had the lawful right to perform, cannot be made subject to a penalty therefor.
The relator is discharged.
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