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Spencer v. Flint Memorial Park Assn

Michigan Court of Appeals
Sep 13, 1966
4 Mich. App. 157 (Mich. Ct. App. 1966)

Opinion

Docket No. 318.

Decided September 13, 1966. Leave to appeal denied by Supreme Court November 25, 1966. See 378 Mich. 742.

Appeal from Genesee; Newblatt (Stewart A.), J. Submitted Division 2 April 6, 1966, at Lansing. (Docket No. 318.) Decided September 13, 1966. Leave to appeal denied by Supreme Court November 25, 1966. See 378 Mich. 742.

Bill of complaint by J. Merrill Spencer against Flint Memorial Park Association for injunction. Judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appeals. Affirmed.

A. Glenn Epps, for plaintiff.

Weiss Damm ( John T. Damm, of counsel), for defendant.



Plaintiff is the owner of certain burial rights or right of sepulture in lot 21 of section 1 of the Flint Memorial Park Cemetery which is owned by defendant Flint Memorial Park Association, a Michigan nonprofit corporation.

This suit was brought against the association by plaintiff, a Negro, to enjoin the association from interfering with and refusing to allow plaintiff to bury the body of a Negro tendered by plaintiff for burial in the plot owned by plaintiff. Defendant raised as a defense a restrictive agreement or condition, existing at the time plaintiff purchased the burial plot, which excluded the bodies of Negroes from burial in the cemetery.

The cause being submitted on an agreed statement of facts, the trial court issued a summary judgment in plaintiff's favor from which defendant has processed this appeal.

The sole question to be determined here is: Whether it is a denial of equal protection under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution for a State to enforce a restrictive agreement of a cemetery association which would deny the owner of a cemetery plot, who is a Negro, the right to bury a non-Caucasian therein.

The excellent opinion filed in this cause by the learned trial judge, Stewart A. Newblatt, leaves nothing further to be said. We enthusiastically adopt the reasoning and conclusions therein. The opinion is as follows:

"This court is now being asked to pass on the question of whether a cemetery association may refuse to permit an owner of a lot the right to bury a Negro in that lot. In a sense, it seems highly grotesque to spend such time and legal effort in considering the rights of dead soulless bodies when we have not as a society yet secured full rights for the living.

"This cause has been submitted upon a joint statement of facts which need not be repeated herein except to note that the plaintiff is the owner of a cemetery plot — right of sepulture in the language of the trade — in defendant cemetery which cemetery was organized as a nonprofit corporation under PA 1869, No 12, as a rural cemetery. The plaintiff's ownership of this plot was previously determined in an earlier case between these parties in this circuit, being Case No. 68906, which determination was not appealed and which therefore is final. When a burial right is purchased, one of the conditions thereof provides that:

See, as last amended, CL 1948 and CLS 1961, § 456.101 et seq., as last amended by PA 1964, No 54 (Stat Ann 1963 Rev and Stat Ann 1965 Cum Supp § 21.871 et seq.).

"`In no instance shall the cemetery be utilized for the burial of dead bodies of other than the human race and of the Caucasian race only, or of the ashes thereof.'

"It is of no importance to the decision in this cause whether or not such restriction was in the certificate of ownership upon which the plaintiff relies for the plaintiff purchased this lot knowing of such restriction. There is no question but that if this court is required to enforce this provision, it would be applicable to the plaintiff and his burial plot.

"The statute under which the defendant was organized provides that lands set aside for cemetery purposes and the rights of burial therein are wholly tax exempt, CL 1948, § 456.108 (Stat Ann 1963 Rev § 21.878), and that such rights are transferable and as fully alienable as any other personal property in this State subject only to such conditions as shall be prescribed by the board of directors (CLS 1961, § 456.112 [Stat Ann 1963 Rev § 21.882]).

"The owner of the lot, the plaintiff, is a Negro and the body tendered and which was refused was that of a Negro. It is in this general context that this cause must be decided.

"Obviously under the law of contracts, we must deny the plaintiff recovery if the restriction is enforceable for aside from valid public regulation, a cemetery lot owner's rights are contractual and subject to the ordinary rules of contract law. 4 Michigan Law and Practice, p 674; 14 CJS, Cemeteries, § 25; Lewis v. Glen Eden Development Company (1936), 276 Mich. 627. This brings us squarely to the 1948 case of Shelley v. Kraemer and McGhee v. Sipes (1948), 334 U.S. 1 ( 68 S Ct 836, 92 L ed 1161). (Note that although the case is known as Shelley v. Kraemer, McGhee v. Sipes was a companion case which came to the United States Supreme Court by certiorari from the Michigan Supreme Court.) In Michigan prior to this case, the Michigan Supreme Court considered that covenants prohibiting sale or transfer of title to persons of a particular race were invalid as constituting unlawful restraints on alienation, 3 ALR2d 475; but Michigan also took the view that racial covenants or conditions restricting use and occupancy by non-Caucasians were generally valid and enforceable. Parmalee v. Morris (1922), 218 Mich. 625 (38 ALR 1180); Schulte v. Starks (1927), 238 Mich. 102; Sipes v. McGhee (1947), 316 Mich. 614, rev'd 334 U.S. 1 ( 68 S Ct 836, 92 L ed 1161); Northwest Civic Association v. Sheldon (1947), 317 Mich. 416 (4 ALR2d 1359); Malicke v. Milan (1948), 320 Mich. 65 (4 ALR2d 1412), (reversed after Shelley v. Kraemer); Porter v. Barrett (1925), 233 Mich. 373 (92 ALR 1267). As a result of Shelley v. Kraemer which reversed McGhee v. Sipes, the judicial enforcement by State courts of covenants restricting the use and occupancy of real property to persons of the Caucasian race was held to be in violation of the `equal protection' clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. The reasoning of this decision makes it clear that although that amendment prohibits State action which denies the equal protection of the law to all persons, but does not prohibit private action, the Court for the first time held that judicial action enforcing private discriminatory agreements is State action and therefore within the 14th Amendment's field of operation. The holding consequently was that, although such restrictive covenants regardless of the race against whom they were directed are not invalid or void (since they result from the action of individuals), they were nevertheless unenforceable in the State courts for such enforcement would be State action. The Supreme Court in Shelley v. Kraemer, supra at p 13, put it thus:

"`We conclude, therefore, that the restrictive agreements standing alone cannot be regarded as violative of any rights guaranteed to petitioners by the 14th Amendment. So long as the purposes of those agreements are effectuated by voluntary adherence to their terms, it would appear clear that there has been no action by the State and the provisions of the amendment have not been violated. * * * But here there was more. These are cases in which the purposes of the agreements were secured only by judicial enforcement by State courts of the restrictive terms of the agreements. * * * [Citing In Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.S. 339, 347 ( 25 L ed 676, 679) — an 1880 case]. * * * "A State acts by its legislative, its executive, or its judicial authorities. It can act in no other way." * * * We have no doubt that there has been State action in these cases in the full and complete sense of the phrase. The undisputed facts disclose that petitioners were willing purchasers of properties upon which they desired to establish homes. The owners of the properties were willing sellers; and contracts of sale were accordingly consummated. It is clear that but for the active intervention of the State courts, supported by the full panoply of State power, petitioners would have been free to occupy the properties in question without restraint. * * * These are cases in which the States have made available to such individuals [those desiring to impose the restrictive covenants] the full coercive power of government to deny to petitioners, on the grounds of race or color, the enjoyment of property rights in premises which petitioners are willing and financially able to acquire and which the grantors are willing to sell. The difference between judicial enforcement and nonenforcement of the restrictive covenants is the difference to petitioners between being denied rights of property available to other members of the community and being accorded full enjoyment of those rights on an equal footing. * * * Judicial action is not immunized from the operation of the 14th Amendment simply because it is taken pursuant to the State's common-law policy. Nor is the amendment ineffective simply because the particular pattern of discrimination, which the State has enforced, was defined initially by the terms of a private agreement. State action, as that phrase is understood for the purposes of the 14th Amendment, refers to exertions of State power in all forms. And when the effect of that action is to deny rights subject to the protection of the 14th Amendment, it is the obligation of this Court to enforce the constitutional commands. * * * We hold that in granting judicial enforcement of the restrictive agreements in these cases, the States have denied petitioners the equal protection of the laws and that, therefore, the action of the State courts cannot stand.'

"In answer to the contention that such restrictive covenants would not deny equal protection of the laws because such covenants could be used to restrict ownership, use or occupancy of whites, orientals, Indians, et cetera, as well as Negroes, the Supreme Court said [at p 22]:

"`The rights created by the first section of the 14th Amendment are, by its terms, guaranteed to the individual. The rights established are personal rights. It is, therefore, no answer to these petitioners to say that the courts may also be induced to deny white persons rights of ownership and occupancy on grounds of race or color. Equal protection of the laws is not achieved through indiscriminate imposition of inequalities.'

"The United States Supreme Court followed this case with Barrows v. Jackson (1953), 346 U.S. 249 ( 73 S Ct 1031, 97 L ed 1586), holding that a State court's award of damages in an action for breach of a covenant restricting the use and occupancy of real property to persons of the Caucasian race was State action under the 14th Amendment and therefore prohibited. ( Shelley v. Kraemer, supra, dealt with the validity of a State court's action enjoining the use and occupancy of the premises by members of the group which the restrictive covenant barred.)

"The Michigan Supreme Court reentered the picture with Phillips v. Naff (1952), 332 Mich. 389, which held that an action for damages for breach of a reciprocal racial restriction in a suit against a person who sold to a Negro in violation of such restriction was an indirect action for enforcement of the restriction and, as such, was State action within the ruling of Shelley v. Kraemer and the companion case arising out of the District of Columbia, Hurd v. Hodge (1948), 334 U.S. 24 ( 68 S Ct 847, 92 L ed 1187). The Michigan Supreme Court in a decision by Justice CARR in Phillips v. Naff, supra, expressly refused to follow Weiss v. Leaon (1949), 359 Mo 1054 ( 225 S.W.2d 127), which latter case drew a distinction in terms of State action and private action between injunctive relief to enforce such a restriction and a suit for damages for breach thereof. The Michigan Supreme Court said in Phillips v. Naff, supra, at p 401:

"`We are not in accord with such decision. As above suggested, if a sale of property subject to a reciprocal racial covenant cannot be made without rendering the grantor liable to suits for damages, such fact, it may be assumed, would operate to inhibit freedom of purchase by those against whom the discrimination is directed, and also to place a burden on the right of an owner to sell to a purchaser of his own selection. We think the reasons on which the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Shelley v. Kraemer was based operate in bar of an indirect method of enforcement, and are sufficiently broad in scope as to cover the rights of those affected in the instant controversy.'

"The foregoing appears to answer the defendant's argument that permitting the defendant to assert the covenant in defense of a suit by the plaintiff was not enforcement of the restrictive covenant by the State. This writer can conceive of no significant difference between the restrictive covenant being used as a basis for an action for either damages or an injunction by the proponent of such covenant and its assertion as a defense. If such covenant is recognized by a State court either as an offensive or a defensive legal weapon, it is supported in either case by all the coercive power of government and is equally an enforcement of the covenant such as would be barred by Shelley v. Kraemer, supra. Support for this view need not rest solely on the cases already cited, but may be found in Clifton v. Puente (1948, Tex Civ App), 218 S.W.2d 272. In that case the defendant obtained possession of the premises prior to the time the Mexican purchaser was able to obtain possession. When the purchaser sought a judgment for possession and was met with the defense that his possession would violate a covenant prohibiting sale or lease to persons of Mexican descent, violation of which covenant would re-vest title in the violator's grantor, the Texas court held that the covenant may not be used as a defense to the action for title and possession of the realty. The court said at page 274 that:

"`It is as much an enforcement of the covenant to deny to a person a legal right to which he would be entitled except for the covenant as it would be to expressly command by judicial order that the terms of the covenant be recognized and carried out. No valid distinction can be predicated upon the position of a party * * * as a plaintiff or as a defendant. Under the decision of the Supreme Court above referred to [ Shelley v. Kraemer], judicial recognition or enforcement of the racial covenant involved here by a State court is precluded by the "equal protection of the laws" clause of the 14th Amendment.'

"And so the defendant's contention that there is nothing in the law which indicates a recognition of a defense to a suit by recognition of a racially restrictive covenant is erroneous. It is based upon the proverbial `distinction without a difference' and falls within the 14th Amendment's ban upon State action.

"The law having been established as to restrictive covenants and the ban upon their enforceability by the State courts, is there any reason why such ban should not be applied to a cemetery lot, be it ownership thereof in fee simple, a mere right of burial or sepulture, a license, franchise or easement? The defendant asserts that burial rights are different and that such racially discriminatory clauses as are here involved are permissible. In support of this contention, defendant cites 14 CJS, Cemeteries, § 31, pp 90, 91, and 10 Am Jur, Cemeteries, § 30, pp 507, 508, both of which state that a cemetery corporation may validly pass a regulation stating that the remains of persons of the white race only may be admitted to burial. * * * In response to such assertion, it need only be pointed out that both quotations are out of date, the quotation from American Jurisprudence having been written in 1937, and that from Corpus Juris Secundum in 1939, 11 and 9 years respectively before Shelley. The supplements to these works do not refer to Shelley nor is any editorial comment changed or added. In short, such out of date encyclopedic authority cannot be relied upon. The same applies to the case authority cited by defendant, specifically People, ex rel. Gaskill, v. Forest Home Cemetery (1913), 258 Ill. 36 ( 101 N.E. 219); Forest Lawn Memorial Park Association v. De Jarnette (1926), 79 Cal.App. 601 ( 250 P. 581); Booker v. Grand Rapids Medical College (1909), 156 Mich. 95 (24 LRA NS 947); State, ex rel. Clark, v. Maryland Institute (1898), 87 Md. 643 ( 41 A 126).

"Both plaintiff and defendant cite Rice v. Sioux City Memorial Park Cemetery (1953), 245 Iowa 147 ( 60 N.W.2d 110, 348 U.S. 880 ( 75 S Ct 122, 99 L ed 693) (United States Supreme Court affirmed Iowa court by an equally divided court without opinion on November 15, 1954); 349 U.S. 70 ( 75 S Ct 614, 99 L ed 897). (United States Supreme Court on rehearing of the prior affirmance and withdrawal thereof and dismissal of the writ of certiorari.) This case involved a cemetery with the same type of restriction as that in the instant case, but instead of a Negro, it involved a person of 11/16 Winnebago Indian blood and 5/16 white blood. The deceased was Sgt. John Rice who was killed in active combat duty in Korea. Burial was refused because he was not a Caucasian and an action was brought by the widow against the cemetery for damages for the cemetery's refusal to permit the burial in a lot purchased by the widow. In the Iowa court's analysis, there was no question but that there was no distinction drawn between Shelley v. Kraemer, supra, and the Rice Case upon the grounds that the former dealt with real estate in the traditional sense and the latter with a cemetery lot or right of burial. The Iowa court held that such indirect `support of private agreements containing restrictive covenants' as that which would permit the plaintiff to recover damages against the cemetery was an unwarranted extension of the doctrine of Shelley v. Kraemer. Further, the Iowa court had in mind the preservation of `desirable individual rights of restriction in church and fraternal private burial places.'

"This case cannot be considered as authority for the defendant's view in the instant case for three reasons:

"First: The Iowa court somehow throws into the balance scale of justice a fact not in existence in the instant case, to wit: The place of church and fraternal private burial places. More will be said on this subject shortly;

"Second: The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari and affirmed by an equally divided court; upon rehearing, the affirmance was vacated and the writ of certiorari was dismissed as having been improvidently granted. It is too basic to require a citation of authority that the denial of a writ of certiorari in the United States Supreme Court is not authority for anything except that the Court has exercised its discretion to refuse to hear and decide the case on the merits. See the opinion on the rehearing for a discussion of the reasons for dismissing the writ of certiorari;

"Third: The Rice Case is not authority in the instant case because the State of Michigan is committed to the doctrine that indirect enforcement of such covenants is equally prohibited under Shelley v. Kraemer, supra, as direct enforcement. See Phillips v. Naff, supra.

"Should the fact that the property involved is a cemetery lot require a conclusion different from Shelley? We have seen that on the basis of a difference in the nature of the property interest, there was no distinction drawn even in Rice and the `restrictive covenant — State action' analysis was applied by the Court in reaching its decision. But going further, this question should be asked: Is the private covenant any less restrictive because it deals with a cemetery lot or with personal property? The answer appears obvious — No. Is the enforcement by State courts of such private covenants as to a cemetery lot any less State action than if the covenant dealt with real property? Again the answer should be obvious — No.

"As pointed out by the defendant, the interest of the plaintiff herein is a burial right or right of sepulture. There is no question but that such burial right is a peculiar interest incapable of being pushed into the convenient pigeonhole lawyers and judges are so wont to place difficult concepts. It is not a fee interest, but rather a right of burial which is transferable and the rights of holders thereof are legally enforceable. Rowley v. Laingsburg Cemetery Association (1921), 215 Mich. 673; Wetherby v. City of Jackson (1933), 264 Mich. 146; Wells v. Daniell (1934), 266 Mich. 250; Richmond Hills Memorial Park Association v. Richardson (1936), 275 Mich. 403; Huse v. East China Township Board (1951), 330 Mich. 465; Harvey v. Lewis (1959), 357 Mich. 305. Regardless of what label we hang on this interest, it is a property right.

"`Whether the purchaser of a burial space acquires a special kind of estate in fee subject to various conditions, regulations and restrictions coupled with the use of common cemetery facilities or a kind of perpetual easement coupled with an interest in the entire cemetery, or whether the property is a special kind of perpetual license or privilege, the fact remains that it is, nevertheless, an "interest in real estate" within the purview of the statute. Our statutes treat ownership of an interest in a cemetery lot as an interest in real estate. They provide for transfer of the interest by sale or inheritance * * * and provide that actions by a public cemetery association to quiet title to cemetery lots may proceed in the same manner as actions to determine title to real estate. * * * Even though a purchaser of a cemetery lot may not acquire the fee simple title to the property, he has a right in the lot which the law recognizes and protects.' (Emphasis supplied.) Erickson v. Sunset Memorial Park Association (1961), 259 Minn. 532 ( 108 N.W.2d 434).

"It appears therefore clear that the `restrictive covenant — State action — 14th Amendment' approach applies to cemetery lots to the same extent that such analysis applies to more conventional property interest. See Erickson, supra.

"In reaching the conclusion that such restrictive covenants as are here involved are unenforceable, this writer would make it absolutely clear that such conclusion in no way prevents cemeteries maintained by a particular religious faith from restricting burial rights to members of that faith. That is not the case with the defendant cemetery in this cause. Defendant was organized under PA 1869, No 12, as amended, CL 1948, § 456.101 (Stat Ann 1963 Rev § 21.871) which act is entitled:

"`An act to authorize and encourage the formation of corporations to establish rural cemeteries, and to provide for the care and maintenance thereof, and to provide for the revision and codification of the laws relating to cemeteries, mausoleums, crypts, vaults, crematoriums, and other means of disposing of the dead, and to make an appropriation therefor.'

"There is no religious or fraternal aspect to the operation of the defendant either by any applicable statute or in its articles of incorporation or in the manner in which it is operated.

"The language of the Minnesota court in Erickson, supra, at p 542 is equally appropriate to the defendant, Flint Memorial Park. Justice Murphy said:

"`The public nature and character of its business and interests, as reflected by the provisions of chap 306, by virtue of which the State permits it to operate, should be distinguished from the private character of cemeteries operated by religious and fraternal corporations under chap 307 and cemeteries within the purview of the last sentence of section 306.02, which recognizes the right of a public cemetery association affiliated with a religious corporation to acquire properties to be used exclusively for burial of persons of that particular faith. From time immemorial cemeteries and interment in them have had a close identification with religion. This identification is natural to religion in civilized cultures. An essential element of many religious beliefs, strongly held for centuries, has been that their communicants must be buried in consecrated ground in which only communicants of that particular faith may be buried. The right of burial in a religious or fraternal cemetery derives from membership. It is for that reason that church cemeteries are classified as private cemeteries in which the exclusive burial of communicants of a religious faith may be practiced in accordance with its beliefs.'

"In this regard sales of lots in defendant's cemetery are not restricted by virtue of any required membership in any religious, fraternal or other type of special organization, but are for sale to the general public without qualification except as to the restrictive covenant with which this opinion deals.

"And finally, defendant asserts that `there is nothing to prevent the plaintiff from choosing a place of burial among his own kind.' In this connection please note the language of the Supreme Court previously quoted on page 164 of this opinion indicating that the rights under the 14th Amendment are personal rights that are not attached to white persons or to Negroes or to Indians, et cetera, but to individuals. I repeat:

"`Equal protection of the law is not achieved through the indiscriminate imposition of inequality.'

"How valid and significant is defendant's statement that plaintiff could `seek burial among his own kind'? Does the defendant assume that plaintiff's own kind is restricted to skin pigmentation? May not the plaintiff select the burial place of his loved ones on the basis of location, price, esthetic appreciation or whatever personal factors an individual may want to use to select a burial plot? It is a bizarre interpretation of the equal protection of the laws clause of the 14th Amendment to conclude that this protection is to afford a white person what all white people would want — burial among whites; and to the Negro a burial `among his own kind.' The law of this land looks to enforcement of the rights of individuals without presuming to force upon the individual what we imagine such individuals want and without assuming that there is recognized in the law a social, economic, racial, religious or political caste system with a different set of rights and desires for all members of each group. When the law recognizes the philosophy represented by `his own kind,' we are only a step away from adopting the racist philosophy which World War II was fought to eliminate.

"This opinion must close and this writer can think of no better way than to quote the language of Mr. Justice Dooling in Long v. Mountain View Cemetery Association (1955), 130 Cal.App.2d 328, 330 ( 278 P.2d 945, 946); also quoted at page 535 of Erickson:

"`I cannot believe that a man's mortal remains will disintegrate any less peaceably because of the close proximity of the body of a member of another race, and in that inevitable disintegration I am sure that the pigmentation of the skin cannot long endure. It strikes me that the carrying of racial discrimination into the burial grounds is a particularly stupid form of human arrogance and intolerance. If life does not do so, the universal fellowship of death should teach humility. The good people who insist on the racial segregation of what is mortal in man may be shocked to learn when their own lives end that God has reserved no racially exclusive position for them in the hereafter.'

"JUDGMENT FOR THE PLAINTIFF and an appropriate judgment order shall be tendered by plaintiff's counsel forthwith for signature."

Judgment for plaintiff affirmed. Costs to appellee.

T.G. KAVANAGH and QUINN, JJ., concurred.


Summaries of

Spencer v. Flint Memorial Park Assn

Michigan Court of Appeals
Sep 13, 1966
4 Mich. App. 157 (Mich. Ct. App. 1966)
Case details for

Spencer v. Flint Memorial Park Assn

Case Details

Full title:SPENCER v. FLINT MEMORIAL PARK ASSOCIATION

Court:Michigan Court of Appeals

Date published: Sep 13, 1966

Citations

4 Mich. App. 157 (Mich. Ct. App. 1966)
144 N.W.2d 622

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