J-S68015-17
2017 PA Super 373
IN RE: : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
ESTATE OF: MARCELLA MARIE :
MARSH :
:
:
APPEAL OF: BRIAN MARSH :
:
: No. 743 MDA 2017
Appeal from the Decree Entered April 6, 2017
In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County Orphans' Court at
No(s): 35-2013-00126
BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., DUBOW, J., and STRASSBURGER*, J.
OPINION BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 22, 2017
Brian Marsh appeals from the decree entered in the Court of Common
Pleas of Lackawanna County, Orphans’ Court Division, denying his petition for
disinterment of the remains of Marcella Marie Marsh, Deceased (“Decedent”).
Upon careful review, we affirm.
Decedent died on July 28, 2013, at the age of 66, survived by three
daughters, including Appellee Colleen Lizza, and one son, Appellant Marsh.
Marsh was appointed administrator of Decedent’s estate after obtaining
renunciations from his sisters. He subsequently agreed to resign as
administrator after Lizza filed a petition to remove him from office.
On April 14, 2016, Marsh, in his individual capacity, filed a petition for
disinterment of his mother’s body. Also in 2016, Marsh filed a wrongful death
and survival action against Lizza, seeking damages related to Decedent’s
death. In his disinterment petition, Marsh claimed that, while her death
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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certificate listed cardio-respiratory arrest as cause of death, Decedent had no
history of heart problems, and he questioned whether her manner of death
was, in fact, “natural,” as stated on her death certificate. Because Decedent’s
body had not been autopsied, Marsh sought disinterment “to determine
whether or not there is any reason sufficient to believe that the sudden death
of the [D]ecedent may have resulted from the act or negligence of person or
persons other than the deceased.” Petition for Disinterment, 4/14/16, at ¶ 9.
Lizza filed a response to Marsh’s petition, contesting his entitlement to
relief. Specifically, Lizza asserted that
[Marsh] has not articulated what potential acts of negligence were
committed by what persons. [Marsh] has not articulated what
theories of negligence exist[] and, even if they do exist, what the
purpose of exhumation would be, [i.e.] lawsuit, monetary
recovery, etc. As to the allegation that “the death of the
[D]ecedent may have resulted from the act . . . of person or
persons other than the [D]eceased,” [Marsh] has failed to identify
any alleged act or actor. Simply stated, [Marsh] has failed entirely
to provide any reasonable basis for the disinterment.
Answer to Petition for Disinterment, 5/17/16, at ¶ 9 (emphasis in original).
The Orphans’ Court held a hearing on December 8, 2016, at which time
the court granted Marsh leave to orally amend his petition to include as a basis
for disinterment Marsh’s desire to perform genetic testing on the Decedent to
discover any potential medical concerns that might affect Marsh or his
offspring. Following the hearing and the submission of briefs, the court denied
Marsh’s petition by Decision and Decree dated April 6, 2017, in which the court
concluded that it was “hesitant to set a precedent that allows for the
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exhumation and autopsy of any individual simply because no autopsy was
performed, or in the circumstance where an heir only becomes concerned with
a Decedent’s medical history years after the death of said Decedent.”
Orphan’s Court Decision and Decree, 4/6/17, at 4. This timely appeal follows,
in which Marsh raises the following question for our review:
Whether the Orphans’ Court committed an error of law and/or an
abuse of discretion in denying [Marsh’s p]etition since reasonable
cause was shown for exhuming and autopsying the [D]ecedent,
and the objective sought for requesting same could be achieved?
Brief of Appellant, at 3.
We begin by noting:
[o]ur standard of review from a final order of the Orphans’ Court
Division requires that we accord the findings of an Orphans’ Court,
sitting without a jury, the same weight and effect as the verdict
of a jury. Thus, we will not disturb those findings absent manifest
error. We shall modify an Orphans’ Court order only if the findings
upon which the order rests are not supported by competent or
adequate evidence or if the court engaged in an error of law, an
abuse of discretion, or capricious disbelief of competent evidence.
In re Ciaffoni, 787 A.2d 971, 973 (Pa. Super. 2001) .
With regard to the removal of a body from its final resting place, our
Supreme Court has stated that “there is no universal rule applicable alike to
all cases, but each must be considered in equity on its own merits, having due
regard to the interests of the public, the wishes of the decedent, and the rights
and feelings of those entitled to be heard by reason of relationship or
association.” Pettigrew v. Pettigrew, 56 A. 878, 880 (Pa. 1904).
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As the Supreme Court made plain in Pettigrew, with regard to
reinterment[1] there is “reserv(ed) always the right of the court
to require reasonable cause to be shown for it.” [Id.] at 880[.]
In addition, the Court made plain that in deciding whether
reasonable cause for reinterment had been shown, the lower court
should take into account a variety of factors[.] Whether
reasonable cause for reinterment has been shown will depend
upon the respective weight, or persuasiveness, of these factors as
they are all considered together[.]” Id.
Novelli v. Carroll, 420 A.2d 469, 472 (Pa. Super. 1980). Among the factors
to be considered are: (1) the degree of relationship to the decedent of the
persons in favor of and opposed to reinterment; (2) desire of the decedent,
with the general presumption being that the decedent would not wish her
remains to be disturbed; (3) the conduct of the persons seeking and opposed
to reinterment; (4) the length of time that has elapsed since the original
interment; and (5) the strength of the reasons offered both in favor of and in
opposition to reinterment. See id. at 472-74. “If the person seeking or
opposing reinterment does so to harass another, his case will be very weak.”
Id. at 474.
Here, Marsh argues that the Orphans’ Court abused its discretion in
denying his request for disinterment because his stated reasons for seeking
exhumation constituted reasonable cause. He also asserts that the court
utilized the improper standard, requiring Marsh to establish “good cause”
rather than “reasonable cause.” We find neither claim persuasive.
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1 The words “disinterment” and “reinterment” have been used interchangeably
by the courts in the various cases involving the removal of a body from its
final resting place.
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When Marsh originally filed his petition, nearly three years after his
mother’s death, the stated purpose was his belief, not supported by any
articulable facts, that his mother’s death may have been caused by a “person
or persons other than the deceased.” Petition for Disinterment, 4/14/16, at ¶
9. Although he did not name the “person or persons,” shortly after filing his
petition for disinterment, Marsh filed a wrongful death and survival action
against Lizza in civil court.
In support of his petition for disinterment, Marsh obtained the expert
opinion of Cyril Wecht, M.D., a renowned pathologist. Doctor Wecht submitted
a written report, in which he noted that “[g]enetic predisposition is a
significant factor in determining future medical testing, personal habits,
dietary restrictions, physical activity, etc.” Only after receiving Dr. Wecht’s
report did Marsh, on the day of the hearing, seek to amend his petition to add
as a ground for disinterment his alleged interest in performing genetic testing
on his mother’s remains to benefit himself and his children.
In light of these facts and circumstances, we cannot say that the
Orphans’ Court abused its discretion in failing to find Marsh’s arguments
persuasive, particularly in light of the seemingly disingenuous nature of his
“genetic testing” rationale. His own medical expert testified that the most
likely cause of death was a natural one. See N.T. Hearing, 12/8/16, at 24.
Although Dr. Wecht mentioned the possibility of trauma to the Decedent’s
body, that speculation was based solely on statements made by Marsh that
the funeral director had told Marsh that Decedent’s jaw and nose had been
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broken. Under oath at his deposition, however, Marsh conceded that the
funeral director never told him Decedent’s jaw or nose were broken. Instead,
Marsh stated that the funeral director told him his mother’s nose “was pushed
off to the side.” N.T. Hearing, 12/8/16, at 26. Notably, Marsh did not call the
funeral director to testify as to the condition of his mother’s body. In any
event, Marsh would have been aware of any statements made to him by the
funeral director in 2013, and could have requested an autopsy at that time.
Moreover, the cases upon which Marsh relies are all distinguishable on
their facts and, therefore, fall short of convincing this Court to disturb the
Orphans’ Court’s decision. In Wawrykow v. Simonich, 652 A.2d 843 (Pa.
Super. 1994), the appellant filed a claim against a decedent’s estate, alleging
that her son was the child of the decedent. The trial court denied appellant’s
claim on the sole basis that there was no statutory or case law authorizing
exhumation for the purpose of establishing paternity for inheritance purposes.
On appeal, this Court noted the following factors: appellant averred
that she was the mother of the minor child and that the child was conceived
at a time when the decedent was the only person with whom she had sexual
relations; appellant listed the decedent as the father on the child’s birth
certificate; appellant averred that the child’s appearance resembled closely
that of the decedent; and blood groupings obtained from the putative paternal
grandparents were determined to be “not inconsistent” with decedent’s
paternity. The Court concluded that “[a] party seeking DNA testing as a
vehicle to supplement his/her arsenal of evidence to prove paternity
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should not be denied access to such potentially probative evidence, provided,
as is the case here, the petitioner satisfies the ‘reasonable cause’ criterion to
warrant exhumation.” Id. at 847 (emphasis added). Accordingly, as the trial
court had not made a determination as to reasonableness, the matter was
remanded for that purpose.
Wawrykow is distinguishable from the case at bar. In particular, in
that case, the petitioner had significant other evidence supporting her claim
that her son was, in fact, the child of the decedent. She sought DNA testing
merely to “supplement” her already significant “arsenal of evidence.” Id. In
contrast, here, Marsh presented absolutely no evidence tending to prove that
Decedent’s death resulted from negligence, such that an autopsy could
reasonably be deemed the logical next step in determining responsibility for
Decedent’s demise. Similarly, Marsh’s alleged desire to perform genetic
testing on his mother’s body – itself an apparent afterthought – is supported
by nothing more than speculation that one or more genetic conditions may be
discovered.
Marsh also relies on In re Dillon, 674 A.2d 735 (Pa. Super. 1996).
There, the decedent died as a result of a shotgun blow to the chest suffered
while hunting with a family friend, from whose gun the shot was determined
to have originated. At the time, decedent’s death was ruled an accident.
However, nearly twenty years later, pursuant to legal proceedings initiated by
the coroner, the decedent’s body was exhumed and reautopsied. The coroner
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subsequently released a public announcement stating that the manner of
death had been changed to homicide.
Following that announcement, the decedent’s widow – who had
subsequently married the man whose gun had killed the decedent – petitioned
for another exhumation for the purpose of having three independent
pathologists reautopsy the body. Petitioner grounded her request on her
assertions that the publicity surrounding the coroner’s homicide
announcement had resulted in speculation that petitioner’s new husband was
responsible for decedent’s demise. Petitioner argued that such speculation
had resulted in great personal anguish and emotional distress to her and might
possibly result in the loss of future income. The trial court denied her request.
On appeal, this Court concluded that the petitioner’s testimony as to the
emotional and psychological effects of the coroner’s homicide finding, as well
as the economic effects of the announcement, constituted reasonable cause.
The Court also considered that the petitioner, as the surviving spouse of the
deceased, had the “paramount right to possession and custody of a body and
the concomitant right to control burial or other disposition.” Id., citing
Pettigrew, supra.
In this case, Marsh’s stated curiosity as to what caused his mother’s
death is less compelling than the situation faced by the petitioner in Dillon,
in which her current husband had fallen under a cloud of suspicion for having
murdered her first husband. Indeed, here, Marsh has placed his own sister
under a similar cloud by filing a wrongful death and survival action alleging,
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with no apparent basis other than personal animus, that she was responsible
for their mother’s death. Moreover, unlike in Dillon, Marsh does not possess
the “paramount right” to determine the disposition of his mother’s remains.
Rather, he is but one of several surviving children of the Decedent, at least
one of whom – Lizza – is opposed to disinterment.2 In sum, we do not find
the circumstances present in the instant matter to be analogous to those in
Dillon.
Finally, Marsh asserts that the Orphans’ Court utilized the incorrect
standard in making its determination. Marsh alleges that the court required
a showing of “good cause” when, in fact, the proper standard is “reasonable
cause.” Marsh is entitled to no relief.
In support of this claim, Marsh relies upon Novelli, supra, in which this
Court found that the trial court had erred in using “exceptional cause” as the
standard for reinterment. However, the Orphans’ Court here did not apply an
“exceptional cause” standard. Rather, the court concluded that Marsh did not
demonstrate “good” cause. “Good cause” is defined as “[a] legally sufficient
reason.” Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). The term “reasonable
cause” lacks “a common definition. Indeed, Black’s Law Dictionary only
defines reasonable cause by referring the reader to the term ‘probable cause,’
one most commonly applied in the criminal law context.” Potts v. Step By
Step, Inc., 26 A.3d 1115, 1121 n.2 (Pa. Super. 2011). Black’s Law Dictionary
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2 Decedent’s remaining two daughters were not parties to this action.
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defines probable cause as “[a] reasonable ground to suspect that a person
has committed or is committing a crime” which “amounts to more than a bare
suspicion but less than evidence that would justify a conviction.” Black’s Law
Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). This Court has previously equated “good cause”
with “reasonable cause” in the context of disinterment. See Wawrykow, 652
A.2d at 846 (“Instantly, in establishing cause (be it labelled ‘reasonable,’
‘good,’ or ‘substantial’) for purposes of exhumation, we have of record the
uncontested assertions of the appellant . . .”) (internal citations omitted).
In light of the foregoing, we conclude that the court’s reference to “good
cause” was more a matter of semantics than substance, and that the court
applied the proper standard to Marsh’s claim. Indeed, it is clear from the
court’s opinion that it was aware of the standard applicable to
disinterment/reinterment matters. Specifically, the court noted the duty of a
reviewing court to consider “the reasonability of the request[] for
exhumation.” Orphans’ Court Decision and Decree, 4/7/16, at 2. Accordingly,
we find no merit to Marsh’s assertion that the court applied the improper
standard.
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Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/22/2017
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