Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T00:27:05.677Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Re Plumstead Cemetery

Southwark Consistory Court: Petchey Ch, May 2012 Exhumation – family grave

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 August 2012

Ruth Arlow
Affiliation:
Barrister, Deputy Chancellor of the Dioceses of Chichester and Norwich
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Case Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2012

The petitioner sought permission to exhume the remains of her late husband from a grave in the consecrated part of Plumstead Cemetery and to re-inter them in the consecrated part of Rye Cemetery in East Sussex. He had been killed in a road accident in 2004. At the time of his death it had been his intention to move, with the petitioner and their two sons, to East Sussex. In 2006 the petitioner moved to East Sussex, where she had now established a permanent home near Rye. The remains of one of her uncles were already buried in the consecrated part of Rye Cemetery. The remains of another uncle would be buried there in due course. Another uncle and aunt owned the adjacent grave. The petitioner's parents had reserved a grave opposite those graves and the petitioner had reserved the grave adjacent to that, intending that her husband should be re-interred there, followed, in due course, by her own remains. All the close relatives of her husband supported the petition. The chancellor considered Re Blagdon Cemetery [2002] Fam 299 and noted the principle enunciated there that permission to exhume remains from consecrated ground was to be granted only exceptionally. He gave particular consideration to what the Court of Arches had said about encouraging the establishment of family graves. Having reviewed a number of first-instance decisions concerning family graves following Blagdon, the chancellor held that the consolidation or creation of a family grave was not of itself a sufficient reason justifying exhumation, but that it was a relevant matter. Only if there were reasons why the remains had not been interred in a family grave at the time of burial, or there were other factors justifying a departure from the norm of permanence, would the fact that a proposed exhumation involved removal to a family grave count as an additional factor in favour of a petition. Applying that principle to the facts of the present petition, the sudden and tragic death of the petitioner's husband without having expressed any view about where he wished to be buried, and the fact that he and the petitioner were intending to move at the time, provided an explanation as to why a family grave had not been established in 2004. Those matters, taken together with the benefits arising from the creation of a family grave, were sufficient to justify exhumation. A faculty was granted accordingly. [Alexander McGregor]