SB 1179, as amended, Vidak. Public cemetery districts: interment rights.
Existing law, the Public Cemetery District Law, specifies the procedures for the formation of public cemetery districts, procedures for the selection of the district board of trustees and officers, and the powers and duties of the board. Existing law authorizes a public cemetery district to sell “intermentbegin delete rights”,end deletebegin insert rights,end insertbegin insert”end insert defined as the right to use or control the use of a plot, niche, or other space in a public cemetery district for interment of human remains. Existing law provides for the succession of an interment plot in a private cemetery.
This
bill wouldbegin delete expandend deletebegin insert modifyend insert the definition of “interment rights”begin delete toend deletebegin insert to, among other things,end insert specify that those rights are a form of personal property rights held by the owner to determine, among other things, the number and identity of any person or persons to be interred in thebegin delete plot, niche, crypt, or other space for the interment of human
remainsend deletebegin insert plotend insert within a public cemetery. The bill would require the owner of an interment right, at the time of purchase, to designate a successor owner or owners in a signedbegin delete writingend deletebegin insert written designationend insert deposited with the cemetery district, as specified. The bill would provide the order of succession that would apply, if the owner dies without making that written designation or a valid and enforceable disposition of the interment right in abegin delete testemaryend deletebegin insert testamentaryend insert device.
The bill
also would provide the circumstances and process under which human remains may be disinterred, reinterred, or removed from a public cemetery district after interment, and would specify the records required to be maintained by the public cemetery district and the person removing and relocating the human remains. The bill would require a person who purports to be the successor owner of an interment right to execute a writtenbegin delete statement,end deletebegin insert affidavit,end insert under penalty of perjury, that includes specified information regarding his or her claim of successorship, and would provide that a district or district employee or trustee are not liable for claims, losses, or damages resulting from transferring an interment right in reliance on thatbegin delete statement,end deletebegin insert
affidavit,end insert except as provided.
By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 9002 of the Health and Safety Code is
2amended to read:
The definitions in Chapter 1 (commencing with Section
47000) of Part 1 of Division 7 apply to this part. Further, as used
5in this part, the following terms have the following meanings:
6(a) “Active militia” means the active militia as defined by
7Section 120 of the Military and Veterans Code.
8(b) “Armed services” means the armed services as defined by
9Section 18540 of the Government Code.
10(c) “Board of trustees” means the legislative body of a district.
11(d) “District” means a public cemetery district created pursuant
12to this part or any of its statutory predecessors.
13(e) “Domestic partner” means two adults who have chosen to
14share one another’s lives in an intimate and committed relationship
P3 1of mutual caring, and are qualified and registered with the Secretary
2of State as domestic partners in accordance with Division 2.5 of
3the Family Code.
4(f) “Family member” means any spouse, by marriage or
5otherwise, domestic partner, child or stepchild, by natural birth or
6adoption, parent, brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister,
7parent-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, nephew, niece, aunt,
8uncle, first cousin, or any person denoted by the prefix “grand” or
9“great,” or the spouse of any of these persons.
10(g) “Firefighter” means a firefighter as defined by Section
111797.182.
12(h) (1) “Interment right”
means the rights held by the owner to
13use or control the use of abegin delete plot, niche, crypt, or other space,end deletebegin insert plotend insert
14 authorized by this part, for the interment of human remains,
15including both of the following rights:
16(A) To determine the number and identity of any person or
17persons to be interred in thebegin delete plot, niche, crypt, or other space for begin insert plotend insert
within a cemetery in
18the interment of human remainsend delete
19conformance with all applicable regulations adopted by the
20cemetery district.
21(B) To control the placement, design, wording, and removal of
22memorial markers in compliance with all applicable regulations
23adopted by the cemetery district.
24(2) An interment right is a form of personal property, and is
25governed by Chapter 5.5 (commencing with Section 9069.10).
26(i) “Nonresident” means a person who does not reside within a
27district or does not pay property taxes on property located in a
28district.
29(j) “Peace officer” means a peace officer as defined by Section
30830 of the Penal Code.
31(k) “Principal county” means the county having all or the greater
32portion of the
entire assessed value, as shown on the last equalized
33assessment roll of the county or counties, of all taxable property
34within a district.
35(l) “Voter” means a voter as defined by Section 359 of the
36Elections Code.
Chapter 5.5 (commencing with Section 9069.10) is
38added to Part 4 of Division 8 of the Health and Safety Code, to
39read:
An interment right does not include the right for
4disinterment of human remains except on consent of the cemetery
5district and the written consent of the surviving spouse, child,
6parent, or sibling, in that order of priority.
(a) This chapter does not apply to, or prohibit, the
8removal of remains from one plot to another in the same cemetery
9or the removal of remains by a cemetery district upon the written
10order of any of the following:
11(1) The superior court of the county in which the cemetery is
12located.
13(2) The coroner having jurisdiction of the location of the
14cemetery.
15(3) The health department having jurisdiction of the cemetery.
16(b) The cemetery district shall maintain a duplicate copy of an
17order pursuant to subdivision (a).
18(c) The cemetery district shall retain a true and correct record
19of a removal of remains pursuant to subdivision (a) that includes
20all of the following:
21(1) The date the remains were removed.
22(2) The name and the age at death of the person whose remains
23were removed if available.
24(3) The cemetery and plot from which the remains were
25removed.
26(4) (A) If the removed remains are reinterred, the plot number,
27cemetery name, and location to which the remains were reinterred.
28(B) If the removed remains are disposed of other than by being
29reinterred, a record of the alternate disposition.
30
(5) If the removed remains are reinterred at the cemetery, the
31date of reinterment.
32(d) The person making the removal shall deliver to the cemetery
33district operating the cemetery from which the remains were
34removed a true, full, and complete copy of the record containing
35all of the information specified in subdivision (c).
(a) An interment right is the sole and separate
37property of the person listed as the owner in the records of the
38cemetery district, subject to any writtenbegin delete declarationend deletebegin insert designationend insert
39 to the contrary signed by the owner and deposited with the
40cemetery district, or pursuant to a validbegin insert will orend insert trust, or as directed
P5 1by a superior court of competent jurisdiction in a probate
2proceeding.
3(b) The owner of record of an interment right may designate in
4writing
the person or persons, other than the owner of record, who
5may be interred in thebegin delete plot, niche, or mausoleumend deletebegin insert plotend insert to which the
6owner holds the interment right.
7(c) The owner of an interment right shall, at the time of purchase,
8designate a successor owner or owners of the interment right in a
9signedbegin delete writingend deletebegin insert written designationend insert deposited with the district if
10those successors are qualified by this part to own interment rights
11in the district.
12(d) Use of an interment right transferred from the owner to a
13
successor pursuant to subdivision (c) shall be made in compliance
14with applicable provisions of state and local law, and of applicable
15requirements or policies established by the district board of trustees.
(a) If the owner of an interment right dies without
17making a valid and enforceable disposition of the interment right
18in a testamentary device, or by a written designation pursuant to
19subdivision (c) of Section 9069.20, the successor to the interment
20right shall be determined pursuant to subdivision (b) or as directed
21by a superior court of competent jurisdiction in a probate
22proceeding.
23(b) The priority order of succession is as follows:
24(1) begin deleteFirst, to a end deletebegin insertThe competent end insertsurviving spouse or
registered
25domestic partner.
26(2) To either of the following:
27(A) A sole surviving competent adultbegin delete child.end deletebegin insert child of the deceased
28owner.end insert
29(B) If there is more than one competent adultbegin delete child,end deletebegin insert child of the
30deceased owner,end insert the majority of the surviving competent adult
31children. However, less than the majority of the surviving
32competent adult children shall be vested with the rightsbegin delete and dutiesend delete
33
of this section if they have used reasonable effort to notify all other
34surviving competent adult children of their instructions and are
35not aware of any opposition to those instructions by any surviving
36competent adult children.
37(3) To the surviving competent parent or parents of thebegin insert deceasedend insert
38 owner. If one surviving competent parent is absent, the remaining
39competent parent shall be vested with the rightsbegin delete and dutiesend delete pursuant
P6 1to this section after reasonable efforts have been unsuccessful in
2locating the absent surviving competent parent.
3(4) Either of the following:
4(A) To the sole surviving competent adult sibling of the
5begin insert
deceasedend insert owner.
6(B) If there is more than one surviving competent adultbegin delete sibling,end delete
7begin insert sibling of the deceased owner,end insert then to the majority of the surviving
8competent adult siblings. However, less than the majority of
9competent adult siblings of thebegin insert deceasedend insert owner shall be vested
10with the rightsbegin delete and dutiesend delete
pursuant to this section if they have used
11reasonable efforts to notify all other surviving competent adult
12siblings of their instructions and are not aware of any opposition
13to those instructions by any surviving competent adult sibling.
14(5) If no spouse, child, parent, or sibling survives,begin delete the interment to the spouse of any
15right may be used in the order of death first,end delete
16child of thebegin delete record owner and second, in the order of death to theend delete
17
begin insert deceased owner.end insert
begin delete end delete
18begin insert(6)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertTo theend insert next heirs at law of thebegin insert deceasedend insert owner or the spouse
19of any heir at law.
20(6) The spouse of any deceased child of the owner.
end delete
21
(c) A surviving spouse, registered domestic partner, child, or
22heir who has an interment right pursuant to this section may waive
23that interment right in favor of any other relative of the deceased
24owner or spouse of a relative of the deceased owner.
For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions
26apply:
27(a) “Adult” means an individual who has attained 18 years of
28age.
29(b) “Child” means a natural or adopted child.
30(c) An individual is “competent” if he or she has either not been
31declared incompetent by a court of law or has been declared
32competent by a court of law following a declaration of
33incompetence.
When a public cemetery district acts to transfer
35ownership rights or make an interment on the basis of the
36begin delete declaration,end deletebegin insert affidavit,end insert given under penalty of perjury pursuant to
37Section 9069.40, the district, and any employee or trustee of the
38district, shall not be liable for any claims, losses, or damages
39asserted in any action unless the district had actual knowledge that
40the facts stated in writing are false.
A person who purports to be the successor owner of
2an interment right shall execute a writtenbegin delete statement,end deletebegin insert affidavitend insert
3 declaring, under penalty of perjury, all of the following:
4(a) He or she is the person entitled to succeed to the interment
5right pursuant to Section 9069.25.
6(b) He or she has exerted all reasonable efforts to find other
7persons who may have an equal or higher claim to succeed to the
8interment right.
9(c) He or she is unaware, to the
best of his or her knowledge,
10of any opposition challenging his or her right to succeed to the
11interment right.
Upon the sale to a person of abegin delete plot, niche, crypt, or begin insert plotend insert in a cemetery within a district, the
13other space for intermentend delete
14district shall notify the purchaser, in writing, of any interment
15rights, that this chapter governs the succession of ownership of
16the interment rights, and the district’s duly adopted policies, rules,
17and regulations governing the use, sale, or other transfer of
18interment rights.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
20Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
21the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
22district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
23infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
24for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
25the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
26the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
27Constitution.
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