Kenneth Binns v. Westminster Memorial Park

Filed 2/26/09

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

KENNETH BRUCE BINNS, Plaintiff and Appellant, v.WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK, Defendant and Appellant. G038365 (Super. Ct. No. 05CC13411) O P I N I O N

Appeal from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of Orange County, David T. McEachen, Judge. Affirmed.

Gurnee & Daniels, Steven H. Gurnee and Toby M. Magarian for Defendant and Appellant.

Law Offices of Scott E. Schutzman, Scott E. Shutzman and Lee W. Chen for Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Westminster Memorial Park challenges an award to plaintiff Kenneth Bruce Binns for emotional distress arising from plaintiff’s discovery that defendant had negligently interred the remains of a stranger in a family burial plot intended for plaintiff. Defendant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s finding he suffered serious emotional distress. Finally, defendant contends emotional distress damages should not have been awarded because a reasonable person in plaintiff’s situation would be able to adequately cope with the knowledge that a stranger had been buried in his or her burial plot.

We conclude defendant’s interment of plaintiff’s mother in a plot adjacent to the space reserved for plaintiff created a special relationship with plaintiff giving rise to a duty to avoid mistakenly interring a stranger in his plot. Because burying a stranger in a family plot adjacent to one’s parents may engender intense feelings based on religious, emotional or ethical concerns, it is foreseeable serious emotional distress could result. We limit defendant’s duty only to situations where at least one family member has been interred in the adjacent family plots. Consequently, the potential liability created by recognition of such a duty is not overly burdensome. We also conclude substantial evidence supported the trial court’s determination plaintiff suffered serious emotional distress and that plaintiff’s reaction to the situation was not so abnormal as to preclude recovery.

Plaintiff separately appeals the trial court’s order denying him contractual attorney fees. Plaintiff contends the emotional distress award resulted from an action to enforce the terms of the contract his mother signed with defendant to obtain the family burial plots, and thus triggered the attorney fee clause in that agreement.

We conclude the trial court did not err in denying plaintiff’s attorney fee request. Although defendant’s duty to plaintiff arose in part from a contract, plaintiff’s contract action did not seek to enforce any provision of the agreement. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and order denying attorney fees.

I

Factual and Procedural Background

In 1977, plaintiff’s mother purchased a burial plot for plaintiff’s deceased father in defendant’s cemetery. A few months later, plaintiff’s mother purchased three additional plots adjacent to the plot in which plaintiff’s father was interred, intended for herself, plaintiff, and plaintiff’s wife or, if plaintiff did not marry, plaintiff’s brother. As part of the transaction, plaintiff’s mother executed a purchase agreement with defendant. Plaintiff’s mother died in 1986 and was interred in the plot next to plaintiff’s father.

On Easter 2005, plaintiff visited his parent’s graves and discovered a stranger, Maria Vallejo, buried in the plot immediately adjacent to his mother, which had been reserved for plaintiff. Plaintiff immediately brought the situation to the attention of Lydia Navas, defendant’s family services counselor, who reviewed some records and promised to obtain further information. The following day, Navas contacted plaintiff, confirmed Vallejo had been buried in plaintiff’s plot, and promised to rectify the problem. A few days later, Navas again contacted plaintiff to inform him the cemetery had removed Vallejo from plaintiff’s plot and reinterred the corpse in another location. Defendant had not notified plaintiff it would disturb Vallejo’s remains to rectify the situation.

Defendant maintained two files reflecting plot sales, a “block file” reflecting sales in a particular area of the cemetery and a “Card-ex file,” reflecting the individual sales. Defendant resold plaintiff’s plot to the Vallejo family because it incorrectly recorded the sale of Binns’ family plots in the block file. At the time of Vallejo’s interment, defendant relied exclusively on the “block file” to determine whether a grave was available for interment.

Plaintiff sued defendant for breach of contract and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings, which the trial court denied. The case proceeded as a bench trial. At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant moved for nonsuit, which the court again denied. After trial concluded, the court awarded plaintiff judgment of $4,440. The court denied plaintiff’s attorney fee request because plaintiff’s recovery was “not for enforcement of the agreement . . . , [but] basically for emotional distress for negligence.” Defendant now appeals the judgment and plaintiff appeals the trial court’s order denying attorney fees.

II

Discussion

A. Defendant Owed Plaintiff a Duty Not to Bury a Stranger in His Plot

In awarding plaintiff emotional distress damages, the trial court relied exclusively on plaintiff’s cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress. Damages for severe emotional distress are recoverable in a negligence action “when they result from the breach of a duty owed the plaintiff that is assumed by the defendant or imposed on the defendant as a matter of law, or that arises out of a relationship between the two.” (Marlene F. v. Affiliated Psychiatric Medical Clinic, Inc. (1989) 48 Cal.3d 583, 590 (Marlene F.).) Defendant contends plaintiff’s claim fails because it did not owe plaintiff a duty to prevent the temporary burial of Vallejo in his burial plot. We disagree.

Civil Code section 1714, subdivision (a), presents the general rule concerning a person’s legal responsibility to others: “Everyone is responsible, not only for the result of his or her willful acts, but also for an injury occasioned to another by his or her want of ordinary care or skill in the management of his or her property or person, except so far as the latter has, willfully or by want of ordinary care, brought the injury upon himself or herself.” The Supreme Court has observed that “‘[i]n the absence of a statutory provision limiting this rule, exceptions to the general principle imposing liability for negligence are recognized only when clearly supported by public policy.’” (Burgess v. Superior Court (1992) 2 Cal.4th 1064, 1079.)

Generally, nonstatutory limitations on legal duty turn on (1) the reasonable foreseeability of the risk of injury, and (2) a weighing of policy considerations for and against imposition of liability. (Marlene F., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 588; Erlich v. Menezes (1999) 21 Cal.4th 543, 552.) In elaborating upon the relationship between these two elements, the court in Quesada v. Oak Hill Improvement Co. (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 596, 608 (Quesada) explained that “although the court . . . utilize[s] foreseeability to begin a determination of duty, the final determination . . . is tempered by policy considerations.”

The seminal case of Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d 108 set forth the major factors in determining the scope of a person’s legal duty: “the foreseeability of harm to the plaintiff, the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury suffered, the moral blame attached to the defendant’s conduct, the policy of preventing future harm, the extent of the burden to the defendant and consequences to the community of imposing a duty to exercise care with resulting liability for breach, and the availability, cost, and prevalence of insurance for the risk involved.” (Id. at pp. 112-113.)

In Quesada, the defendant funeral home showed the body of a stranger to the decedent’s family and buried it in the decedent’s plot despite the family’s protests that the body was not the decedent. (Quesada, supra, 213 Cal.App.3d at p. 600.) Following traditional tort analysis, the court noted that in the absence of overriding policy considerations, an objective determination of the foreseeability of risk is of primary importance in establishing the element of duty. (Id. at p. 604.) The court concluded the injury to close friends and relatives from the misplacement of the deceased’s body and the “improper treatment of another” was foreseeable because parties charged with the care, custody, and control of the remains of a deceased should know that their friends and relatives are emotionally vulnerable and preoccupied with concern over the disposition of the body. (Id. at p. 605.) Tempering liability based on foreseeability with relevant policy considerations, the court limited the class of potential plaintiffs to close family members to avoid expansive liability. (Id. at p. 609.)

In Christensen v. Superior Court (1991) 54 Cal.3d 868 (Christensen), decided two years after Quesada, the mortuary defendants contracted with the cemetery defendants to perform cremations. The cemetery defendants mishandled the decedents’ remains. The defendant mortuaries knew or should have known of the cemetery’s malfeasance. (Christensen, at pp. 878-879.) The Supreme Court held family members could recover emotional distress damages because the mortuaries and crematories owed them an independent tort duty arising from a special relationship. (Id. at p. 891.) The court recognized that “‘[o]nce a mortuary . . . undertakes to accept the care, custody and control of the remains, a duty of care must be found running to the members of decedent’s bereaved family.’” (Id. at pp. 887-888.)

The Christensen court determined it was foreseeable that mishandling human remains likely would cause serious emotional distress to members of the decedent’s immediate family. In reaching this conclusion, the court cited with approval Allen v. Jones (1980) 104 Cal.App.3d 207, 211 (Allen). There, the defendant mortuary contracted to ship the remains of the plaintiff’s decedent brother to another state, but lost the remains in transit. The Court of Appeal in Allen observed: “A contract whereby a mortician agrees to prepare a body for burial is one in which it is reasonably foreseeable that breach may cause mental anguish to the decedent’s bereaved relations. ‘One who prepares a human body for burial and conducts a funeral usually deals with the living in their most difficult and delicate moments . . . . The exhibition of callousness or indifference, the offer of insult and indignity, can, of course, inflict no injury on the dead, but they can visit agony akin to torture on the living. So true is this that the chief asset of a mortician and the most conspicuous element of his advertisement is his consideration for the afflicted. A decent respect for their feelings is implied in every contract for his services.’ [Citation.] . . . ‘The tenderest feelings of the human heart center around the remains of the dead.’” (Id. at pp. 211-212.)

In contrast to the situation in Christensen, the present case does not directly involve the handling of the remains of a deceased member of plaintiff’s family or the provision of mortuary services. Moreover, defendant’s error here occurred long after his parents had died, and not at plaintiff’s “‘most difficult and delicate moments.’” (See Allen, supra, 104 Cal.App.3d at p. 211.) In considering whether emotional distress is foreseeable in the present circumstance, we have little analogous case law to guide us. Indeed, the parties have cited no California cases with similar facts.

The closest case factually from another jurisdiction we have found is Angiolillo v. Buckmiller (2007) 102 Conn.App. 697 (Angiolillo), where the defendant funeral home negligently buried the decedent’s cremated remains in an eight-inch by eight-inch hole at the head of his mother’s cemetery plot without the permission of the plaintiffs, the decedent’s nephew and his wife, who owned the mother’s plot and three adjacent plots. Rejecting the plaintiffs’ claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress, the Angiolillo court noted the funeral home followed the wishes of the decedent’s widow, and mistakenly believed it had received permission from the appropriate family members for the burial. The court concluded: “It was not foreseeable that the plaintiff would have such a strong objection to his uncle’s cremains being buried there. Additionally, ‘[a]n individual making an emotional distress claim must show that a reasonable person would have suffered emotional distress . . . that . . . might result in illness or bodily harm . . . .’ [Citations.] In this case, the plaintiffs were not able to prove that a reasonable person would have reacted as they did. The burial of the cremains of the decedent did not interfere with the two grave sites reserved for the plaintiffs, and as soon as the . . . defendants learned of the plaintiffs’ objection, the cremains were removed and buried in another portion of the cemetery.” (Id. at pp. 708-709.)

Thus, Angiolillo presents many similarities with the present case, but also some key differences. Here, like in Angiolillo, the defendant corrected the problem as soon as it was brought to its attention. Unlike Angiolillo, however, Vallejo’s burial interfered with plaintiff’s future burial site, and the disruption to the site was far greater than the small hole placed in the mother’s plot in Angiolillo. Moreover, Vallejo was not a family member, and defendant did not bury Vallejo’s remains under the mistaken belief the plot owner had consented. Family members purchase adjacent burial plots to relieve worry or anxiety about whether they will be buried next to their loved ones. In contrast to an ordinary plot of land, most people attach religious, spiritual, or emotional significance to their gravesite, and many consider it sacred. As one treatise notes: “The sentiment of all civilized peoples regards the resting place of the dead as hallowed ground and requires that in some respects it be not treated as subject to the laws of ordinary property.” (See 14 Am.Jur.2d (2008) Cemeteries, § 31); see also Laurel H. Cemetery Assn. v. San Francisco (1947) 81 Cal.App.2d 371 [describing property used for the burial of the dead as “sacred”].)

True, the accidental resale of an empty burial plot in many cases would not cause serious emotional distress. If the second purchaser inters remains in the resold plot, the cemetery may satisfy the first purchaser by offering a comparable unused plot. Indeed, the terms and conditions of defendant’s purchase agreement recognize that the plots purchased may not be ready when the need for them arises. Specifically, the agreement provides: “In the event the purchaser desires to use the space purchased herein prior to the time it is ready for interment, then seller agrees to furnish other space of similar nature in a fully developed garden, at no extra cost.” But once a cemetery operator inters the remains of one family member in one of several adjacent family plots, the specific location of the remaining plots becomes dramatically more important. In situations like the one here, the family member for whom the plot was purchased must choose (1) interment in a plot where someone else already had been laid to rest (here for 10 years), (2) interment in a plot separated from other family members, (3) interment in a plot designated for a different family member, depriving that family member a place with the others, or (4) exhumation of the remains of predeceased family members and reinterment in a location where all of their remains may be placed together. Although the issue is close, we conclude it is foreseeable a person could suffer severe emotional distress upon discovery a stranger had been buried in their family gravesite.

Having determined emotional distress was foreseeable, the Christensen court applied policy considerations to determine whether liability should accrue and if so, the scope of potential plaintiffs. In doing so, the court determined defendants’ “outrageous and reprehensible” behavior in stealing body parts and comingling remains was morally blameworthy. (Christensen, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 896.) The court also determined the burden and consequences to the community due to excessive litigation were minimal because the court limited the plaintiffs who could recover to close relatives who were aware the services were being performed and for whom the services were performed. (Id. at p. 898.) The court determined that this group of potential plaintiffs would not cause an intolerable burden upon mortuary and cemetery operators, and would not cause the costs to the consumer to increase, or the availability of services to decrease. Because the acts complained of were intentional, cemetery and mortuary operators could easily control their exposure. Finally, the court in Christensen determined the scope of potential liability imposed was not disproportionate because the scope of potential plaintiffs was limited to a specific group. (Id. at p. 900.)

In contrast to the conduct at issue in Christensen, defendant’s mistake in incorrectly recording a plot sale in its block file is not morally reprehensible. Consequently, the scope of a cemetery’s legal duty is narrower than the duty imposed in Christensen. But we have little difficulty including plaintiff within the class of potential plaintiffs. Though unintentional, defendant’s negligent interment of a stranger in plaintiff’s family burial plot compromised the purpose underlying the agreement between the family and the cemetery, i.e., the emotional tranquility arising from the cemetery’s promise that plaintiff will be buried next to his loved ones. While other relatives may be upset to discover a stranger buried in a family plot, it is the intended user of the plot who is most likely to suffer emotional distress from the incident.

Imposing a duty on defendant in the present situation would further the goal of preventing future harm by encouraging cemetery operators to update their filing systems. The evidence in the present case demonstrated defendant was unable to catch their error in the block file system because a double check using their Card-ex system would require searching through approximately 50,000 plot sales. Using a computer-based system would allow easier checking, offering a simple means to prevent future harm that likely would not involve undue expense. Because the tort liability imposed here rests on negligence and not intentional conduct, insurance should cover any future liability from similar mistakes. Finally, we note that recognizing a duty here supports the principle that “[a]s a society we want those who are entrusted with the bodies of our dead to exercise the greatest of care.” (Quesada, supra, 213 Cal.App.3d at 610.)

Accordingly, we hold that a cemetery operator, upon interment of the remains of one family member, undertakes a duty not to bury a stranger in one of these plots. Our holding is narrow; we do not consider any potential liability defendant may have to other members of plaintiff’s family or to members of the Vallejo family, nor do we consider the situation where a stranger is buried in an already occupied plot. We therefore conclude the trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings and for nonsuit.

B. Plaintiff Introduced Sufficient Evidence of Severe Emotional Distress

In Thing v. La Chusa (1989) 48 Cal.3d 644, 667-668, the California Supreme Court recognized that to obtain emotional distress damages, the plaintiff must “suffer[] serious emotional distress –– a reaction beyond that which would be anticipated in a disinterested witness and which is not an abnormal response to the circumstances.” Put another way, “[s]erious emotional distress is such that ‘“a reasonable [person], normally constituted, would be unable to adequately cope with the mental stress engendered by the circumstances of the case.”’ [Citations.] Thus, in determining whether emotional distress is serious, an objective standard is utilized.” (Potter v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. (1993) 6 Cal.4th 965, 989, fn. 12.) Defendant contends plaintiff failed to demonstrate serious emotional distress because he presented no evidence of treatment by medical or mental health care professionals. We disagree.

“Emotional distress includes suffering, anguish, fright, horror, nervousness, grief, anxiety, worry, shock, humiliation, and shame.” (CACI No. 1604; see also Black’s Law Dict. (8th ed. 2004) p. 563 [defining emotional distress].) At trial, plaintiff presented evidence that when he discovered Vallejo’s body buried in his own plot, he began trembling and felt as if he had been “struck by lightning.” He was “horrified,” believing he had been “spiritually violated.” Plaintiff viewed the plot as having been desecrated because Vallejo’s soul had been disturbed when she was moved from what was to have been her final resting place. As a result of defendant’s error, plaintiff testified he suffered from nightmares, loss of appetite, and cold sweats. Plaintiff testified he did not seek medical care because he could not afford it. Plaintiff’s former employer, David Burton, testified at trial that before the incident, plaintiff had been a “phenomenal” salesman, and a skilled silversmith. Burton testified that after the incident, plaintiff’s productivity deteriorated to the point that Burton could no longer leave plaintiff in the jewelry shop alone, explaining plaintiff was “not the same person that I knew for the last 18 years.” This evidence demonstrates a sufficient level of emotional distress to support the award in the present case.

Defendant also challenges the emotional distress award on the basis that a reasonable person in plaintiff’s situation would not suffer serious emotional distress when learning a stranger had been buried in his or her burial plot. Again, we disagree. More than situations involving physical danger, matters concerning the burial of the dead evoke a wide spectrum of responses from reasonable people depending on their cultural, historical, and religious beliefs and traditions. Although many people would not suffer serious emotional distress from seeing a stranger interred in their burial plot, we cannot say that plaintiff’s response was so abnormal as to forbid recovery.

C. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Denying Attorney Fees

Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in denying him attorney fees under Civil Code section 1717 because the sales agreement for the plots contained an attorney fee provision. We disagree.

The purchase agreement between plaintiff’s mother and defendant provided: “In the event it is necessary for seller to institute any legal proceedings for the enforcement of this agreement, or any of the terms and conditions thereof, then purchaser agrees to pay the seller a reasonable sum as attorney’s fees hereof.” Although the purchase agreement purports to grant attorney fees only to the seller of the plots, Civil Code section 1717 makes the fee provision reciprocal. Specifically, Civil Code section 1717, subdivision (a), provides, in relevant part: “In any action on a contract, where the contract specifically provides that attorney’s fees and costs, which are incurred to enforce that contract, shall be awarded either to one of the parties or to the prevailing party, then the party who is determined to be the party prevailing on the contract, whether he or she is the party specified in the contract or not, shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to other costs.”

In denying plaintiff’s attorney fee request, the trial court noted plaintiff’s recovery was “not for enforcement of the agreement . . . , [but] basically for emotional distress for negligence.” Plaintiff disagrees with the trial court’s assessment, arguing the special relationship giving rise to defendant’s liability “arose because Plaintiff was a third-party beneficiary to a cemetery contract with Defendant. But for the existence of this cemetery contract, the law would not recognize any duty owed to Plaintiff, and Plaintiff would have no right to recover on any theory of liability.”

“A tort claim does not enforce a contract. [Citation.] Where a contract authorizes an award of attorney fees in an action to enforce any provision of the contract, tort claims are not covered.” (Gil v. Mansano (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 739, 743-744.) Moreover, a tort action “arising out of a contact is not . . . an action ‘on a contract’ within the meaning of [Civil Code section 1717].” (Stout v. Turney (1978) 22 Cal.3d 718, 730; Loube v. Loube (1998) 64 Cal.App.4th 421, 430 (Loube).)

In Loube, the trial court awarded attorney fees to the prevailing defendant in a legal malpractice action based on an attorney fee clause in the retainer agreement which provided: “‘[I]f legal action or arbitration is necessary to enforce the terms of this Agreement, the prevailing party shall recover reasonable attorneys’ fees.’” (Loube, supra, 64 Cal.App.4th at p. 429.) The Court of Appeal reversed the fee award, noting: “[A]lthough the parties had a contractual relationship, and appellant’s claim for legal negligence arose from the relationship between them, which relationship was founded on a contract, the cause of action sounded in tort and was no more ‘on the contract’ than a claim for breach of fiduciary duty or for fraud involving a contract. It follows that Civil Code section 1717 provides no basis for an award of attorney fees.” (Id. at p. 430.)

The attorney fee clause here tracks the language of the fee provision in Loube because it covers “legal proceedings for the enforcement of this agreement, or any of the terms and conditions hereof.” (Italics added.) Although plaintiff is correct that the duty defendant owed plaintiff here would not have arisen absent the plot purchase agreement, this fact alone does not mean that any action based on a breach of that duty becomes an action to enforce the agreement. Indeed, the special relationship between defendant and plaintiff giving rise to the legal duty breached did not arise when the contract was formed, but when defendant received and interred the remains of plaintiff’s mother.

In an effort to shoehorn the present situation into the attorney fee clause, plaintiff asserts he brought the present action to enforce a provision under the “Terms and Conditions” of the purchase agreement which provides: “[T]he seller, its agent or salesman will not resell or attempt to resell said interment property for the purchaser.” As defendant points out, the clause covers only resales made “for the purchaser.” The manifest purpose of this clause is to disclaim any responsibility for reselling the plots on behalf of the purchaser where the purchaser no longer wanted them. Other than this term, plaintiff can point to no other provision of the purchase agreement he was attempting to enforce in this action. We therefore conclude the trial court did not err in denying plaintiff’s fee request.

III

Disposition

The judgment and order are affirmed. In the interests of justice, each side is to bear its own costs on appeal.

ARONSON, J.

I CONCUR:

O’LEARY, J.
BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J., Concurring and Dissenting:

I am more than a little surprised to find myself writing a dissent in this case. A large part of me feels a dissent is unnecessary. My colleagues have tailored a majority opinion that is mathematically discrete. Litigants not named Binns will have difficulty bringing themselves within the rule of Binns v. Westminster.

But they have created tort liability where, to my mind, none previously existed. And I cannot understand why. Therefore, I must respectfully dissent.

It seems to me we started out with a perfectly intelligible and easily applicable rule. We started with the rule of Christensen v. Superior Court (1991) 54 Cal.3d 868. Christensen was based upon the premise distilled from earlier precedent that conduct amounting to a breach of contract becomes tortious only when it also violates an independent duty arising from principles of tort law. In applying this rule to funerary/mortuary services, it held that such an independent duty arises when one party agrees with another to handle the remains of a deceased loved one. It did not hold that such a duty arises when someone agrees to provide a plot for burial, and I see no reason to create such a rule.

But my colleagues do. They have expanded liability from mishandling remains to mishandling real estate. They have broadened liability of cemeteries and mortuaries to include mishandling the deceased remains of a loved one or burying the wrong person in a family plot.

That last conjunction is very important because so many things could now follow “or.” Before my colleagues added it, Christensen limited cemetery liability; now it seems to me to mean the concept of a special relationship is, in future cemetery cases, limited only by the imagination of counsel.

My colleagues have labored – commendably – to circumscribe this exception as much as possible. They have limited their holding “only to situations where at least one family member has been interred in the adjacent family plots.” I certainly understand their instinct to confine this broadening of tort liability, but narrowing the opinion doesn’t address my problem with it.

My problem is that I don’t see where it will stop. I see nothing about the facts of this case that would bring it within a rule so carefully crafted to apply only to the mishandling of the remains of a deceased loved one – a rule created because those entrusting their loved ones’ remains for funerary or mortuary services are typically bereaved, and thereby limited in their ability to contract in a way most other contracting parties are not. And since I cannot understand why such liability would attach here, I cannot understand why it would not attach in future cases, despite my colleagues’ attempt to limit its spread.

My colleagues understand my difficulty with their efforts to make the facts of this case sound like the functional equivalent of the facts of Christensen. They freely acknowledge that this case, unlike Christensen, involved unintentional conduct, which was not morally reprehensible, did not involve the remains of plaintiff’s loved one, was quickly ameliorated, and involved contractual promises made when no one was bereaved or suffering through one of life’s “most difficult and delicate moments.” The main difference between us is that they are able to follow their acknowledgement of those differences with the rhetorical equivalent of “Nevertheless . . . .” I cannot.

I see no reason to be diagramming the sentences of a Connecticut appellate court to resolve this case. I think California law, culminating in the Christensen case, does it quite nicely. California law provides that generally, “[c]onduct amounting to a breach of contract becomes tortious only when it also violates an independent duty arising from principles of tort law.” (Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 503, 515.) Putting aside insurance cases, a tortious breach of contract may be found where the breach involves a tort such as fraud or conversion, the breach is accomplished by tortious means, such as deceit or undue coercion, or there is an intentional breach committed with the intent or knowledge that it will cause severe emotional distress (Erlich v. Menezes (1999) 21 Cal.4th 543, 554), none of which applies here. “Focusing on intentional conduct gives substance to the proposition that a breach of contract is tortious only when some independent duty arising from tort law is violated. [Citation.] If every negligent breach of a contract gives rise to tort damages the limitation would be meaningless, as would the statutory distinction between tort and contract remedies.” (Ibid.)

Christensen applied these concepts to a very narrow issue – whether family members of an individual who had contracted for crematory or mortuary services for a decedent could recover emotional distress damages for negligence (or intentional infliction of emotional distress) in mishandling the decedent’s remains. (Christensen v. Superior Court, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 875.) The complaint alleged the crematories, without authorization, had removed and harvested organs and body parts, removed gold and other metals from the remains, cremated multiple bodies together, and mixed cremated remains in urns without preserving their integrity or identity. It alleged the mortuaries had agreed to provide “funeral related services” and arrange for cremation, and they knew or should have known of the offending conduct by the crematories they contracted with. (Id. at pp. 878-879.)

The court held the family members could recover emotional distress damages because the mortuaries and crematories owed them an independent tort duty arising from a special relationship. It explained “the relationship between the family of a decedent and a provider of funeral-related services exists in major part for the purpose of relieving the bereaved relatives of the obligation to personally prepare the remains for burial or cremation.” (Christensen v. Superior Court, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 886.) This, it said, imposed a duty of care in performing the contract that ran to third-party relatives: “Defendants here assumed a duty to the close relatives of the decedents for whose benefits they were to provide funeral and/or related services. They thereby created a special relationship obligating them to perform those services in the dignified and respectful manner the bereaved expected of mortuary and crematory operators.” (Christensen v. Superior Court, supra, 54 Cal.3d at pp. 890-891, fn. omitted.)

Christensen does not authorize emotional distress damages for negligence in interring (and promptly removing) a stranger in one’s unoccupied cemetery plot. The complaint there alleged mishandling of human remains, and the court imposed a duty to family members of the deceased to handle the remains with dignity and care. It was based on the mortuaries’ and crematories’ agreement to provide services that relieved the family of the obligation (still observed in other societies) to personally prepare the body of the deceased for burial or cremation.

Here, on the other hand, the disposition of human remains is not in issue. Nor was the handling of human remains; the cemetery contract signed by Binns’ mother did not include interment services. (The contract was “for the interment space and/or spaces . . . only and does not include the interment fee at the time of need, memorial tablets, or any other incidental items.”) I cannot see how Christensen can be read to impose a tort duty on Westminster, since the duty in Christensen was based on an agreement to prepare human remains for burial with the care a family would show, and no such agreement was involved here. Christensen does not suggest, let alone hold, that there exists a special relationship between a cemetery and the family of one who purchases a plot.

To my mind, that means there is no support for an award of emotional distress damages in this matter other than Angiolillo v. Buckmiller (2007) 102 Conn. App. 697, which seems to me a slender reed. In the absence of precedential compulsion, I find nothing to commend the majority’s decision. I doubt that someone selling land – even a burial plot – promises the emotional security offered by a mortician handling the remains of a loved one. I am confident that someone buying a burial plot long before it is needed (the case here) is not as emotionally vulnerable as the relatives of one who has just died. And it seems to me quite questionable whether one is likely to suffer extreme emotional distress where, as here, a mistakenly buried body is removed four days after the mistake. So there is nothing about this case that convinces me we are faced with a problem so serious as to broaden negligence liability beyond that provided by our Supreme Court the last time they visited the issue.

I can certainly sympathize with Mr. Binns’ discomfiture upon learning a stranger had been interred in a burial plot purchased for him. And I can empathize with my colleagues’ agreement with the court in Quesada v. Oak Hill Improvement Co. (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 596, 610, that “as a society we want those who are entrusted with the bodies of our dead to exercise the greatest of care.” These are valid considerations.

But I am not prepared to expand California tort liability by imposing a special duty that would expose cemeteries to amorphous emotional distress damages for every mistake. My colleagues have not done that; they have announced a rule that opens the door to negligence liability only slightly. And they have done so in a reasonable way in an admittedly close case that we all have struggled with. But because I cannot see
anything in their opinion that would enable future courts to block that door – or future litigants to divine how far it will open before someone does find a way to block it – I must dissent.

BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.

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