You can almost see this scene being played out in an episode of The Simpsons. “D’oh!”

In May 2013, crematory workers at Alta Vista Cremation and Funeral Services in Pacheco, California, fired up the furnace and placed the deceased body of 91-year old Vincent Jarvis inside. About 25 minutes into the bake, employees realized they had made a grave mistake.

The coroner had to inform Jarvis’s family of what happened, and why a proper autopsy could not be performed. His family was horrified at the thought of what old-man Jarvis had been through, or at least what his body had been through. According to Jarvis’s daughter, Elizabeth Dennison, “We can’t even look at a picture of our dad without seeing something atrocious and gruesome.” She continued, “This is something that is affecting us daily; we can’t think of our own father.”

Merely a Series of Unfortunate Events

The Jarvis family filed a negligence suit against Alta Vista. Defendant claimed that this was all one big mistake, an “unfortunate paperwork error.” The verdict? Yes, Alta Vista was negligent, but there was no harm done. Damages must be proven to win any negligence case, and the jurors didn’t think that any “serious” emotional distress ensued from the negligence. Perhaps the plaintiffs would have been better off with a breach of contract suit. After all, this wasn’t what they bargained for. Perhaps they could have at least avoided paying for the cremation. But you have to hope that Alta Vista told them this one was “on the house.”

Since Halloween is around the corner, here are some other noteworthy crematory lawsuits:

  • In 2016, a jury awarded a South Florida family $3.5 million for losing their mother’s ashes. In a effort to cover up the situation, the funeral home to give them someone else’s ashes.
  • In 2017, a settlement was reached for $30,000 between an Elgin, Illinois funeral home and a man who claimed his wife was wrongfully cremated; she wanted to be buried.
  • In 2018, a Houston, Texas family filed suit for $50 million for cremating their loved one, when she wanted to be buried. It will be interesting to see how that case proceeds, given the high monetary damages sought.

Related Resources:

  • Can I Sue for Mortuary or Funeral Home Negligence? (FindLaw Injured)
  • Discrimination After Death: Funeral Home Sued for Refusing to Cremate Gay Man (FindLaw Law and Daily Life)
  • What Are the Penalties for Desecrating the Dead? (FindLaw Legally Weird)

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