In re Owens

Smith, J.:

The facts presented in the petition fully justified the order made if the court had jurisdiction to make the same. I am unable to find any statute authorizing this application. In Matter of Cohen (76 App. Div. 401; 78 N. Y. Supp. 417) the Appellate Division of the second department seems to have held that the Special Term was without power to make such an order unless it was authorized to make the same by some special statutory enactment. In that case an order made by the Special. Term authorizing the removal of a body from a cemetery Was reversed as unauthorized by any statute. Justice Woodward, writing for the court, says: “I do not express any opinion upon the question whether under the general law of the State as to the right to control the disposition of dead bodies, the petitioner might not be able to obtain relief in an equitable action instituted for that purpose.”

The petitioner in her brief in this court bases her right upon chapter 559 of the Laws of 1895, as amended by chapter 715 of *238the Laws of 1900. This is one of the General Laws, known as the Membership Corporations Law, and if applicable to the defendant association, justifies the order made. By section ,2 of said law it is provided: The term membership corporation means a corporation hereafter incorporated under .this chapter, or heretofore incorporated under any law repealed by this chapter, but does not include a membership corporation created by special law.” Section 40, under article 3, referring specifically to cemetery corporations, defines a cemetery corporation as “ any corporation heretofore created for cemetery purposes under a law repealed by this chapter, or hereafter created under this article.” Section 51 of the Membership Corporations Law (as amd. by Laws of 1900, chap. 715), which is the section under which this application was made, clearly refers, to a removal of a body from a cemetery owned by a cemetery corporation as defined by the act itself. But the Albany Cemetery Association, which is made the respondent to this application, and which is here the appellant, was organized under special law, to wit, chapter 115 of the Laws of 1841, as amended by chapter 445 of the Laws of 1851. This law was not repealed by the Membership Corporations Law, and hence this respondent is not a corporation to which section 51 of the Membership Corporations Law is made applicable. I am unable to sée, therefore, how it can be claimed that authority for this application can rest upon this statute, and no other statute is called to our attention which can support this application. The order should,therefore, be reversed.

All concurred.

Order reversed, without costs, and motion denied, without costs.