Ala. man fights to keep wife buried in front yard
STEVENSON, Ala. (AP) — James Davis is fighting
to keep the remains of his late wife right where he dug her grave: In the front
yard of his home, just a few feet from the porch.
Davis said he was only abiding by Patsy Ruth Davis'
wishes when he buried her outside their log home in 2009, yet the city sued to
move the body elsewhere. A county judge ordered Davis to disinter his wife, but
the ruling is on hold as the Alabama Civil Court of Appeals considers
his challenge.
Davis, 73, said he never expected such a
fight.
"Good Lord, they've raised pigs in their
yard, there's horses out the road here in a corral in the city limits, they've
got other gravesites here all over the place," said Davis. "And there shouldn't
have been a problem."
While state health officials say family
burial plots aren't uncommon in Alabama, city officials worry about the
precedent set by allowing a grave on a residential lot on one of the main
streets through town. They say state law gives the city some control over where
people bury their loved ones and have cited concerns about long-term care,
appearance, property values and the complaints of some neighbors.
"We're not in the 1800s any longer," said
city attorney Parker
Edmiston. "We're not talking about a homestead, we're not talking about
someone who is out in the country on 40 acres of land. Mr. Davis lives in
downtown Stevenson."
A strong libertarian streak runs through
northeast Alabama, which has relatively few zoning laws to govern what people do
with their property. Even a neighbor who got into a fight with Davis over the
gravesite — Davis said he punched the man — isn't comfortable with limiting what
a homeowner can do with his property.
"I don't think it's right, but it's not my
place to tell him he can't do it," said George W. Westmoreland, 79, who served three
tours of duty in Vietnam. "I laid my life on the line so he
would have the right to do this. This is what freedom is about."
Westmoreland declined to discuss his specific objections to the grave.It's unclear when the appeals court might rule. Attorneys filed initial papers in the appeal on Friday. The decision could come down to whether the judges believe the front-yard grave constitutes a family plot that requires no approval or a cemetery, which would.
In the meantime, Davis has protested by
running for City
Council. A campaign sign hangs near a bigger sign in his yard that says:
"Let Patsy Rest in Peace."
A law professor who is familiar with the
case said it's squarely at the intersection of personal rights and government's
power to regulate private
property. While disputes over graves in peoples' yards might be rare,
lawsuits over the use of eminent domain actions and zoning restrictions are
becoming more common as the U.S. population grows, said Joseph Snoe, who teaches
property law at Samford University in suburban Birmingham.
"The United States Supreme Court has said that
the states, and the cities through the states, have the power to regulate. But
if it goes too far ... then the government's got to pay, and there are certain
things the government just doesn't have the power to do," he said. "As we get
bigger and as government gets bigger and as people are more regulated ... you
start having more and more disagreements."
Davis, a longtime carpenter, built the
family's home on a corner on Broad Street about 30 years ago in Stevenson, a
town of about 2,600 in northeast Alabama. Once a bustling railroad stop, the
city is now so quiet some people don't bother locking their doors. Stars twinkle
brightly in the night sky; there aren't many lights to blot them out.
Davis first met Patsy when she was a little
girl. They were married for 48 years, but she spent most of her final days
bedridden with crippling arthritis. Seated on a bench beside her marble
headstone and flower-covered grave, Davis said he and his wife planned to have
their bodies cremated until she revealed she was terrified by the thought.
"She said this is where she wanted to be and could she be put here, and I
told her, 'Yeah,'" Davis said. "I didn't think there'd be any problem."There was, though. A big one.
After his wife died on April 18, 2009, the City Council rejected Davis' request for a cemetery permit. The decision came even though the county health department signed off on the residential burial, saying it wouldn't cause any sanitation problems.
Ignoring the council's decision, Davis said he and a son-in-law cranked a backhoe and dug a grave just a few feet from the house. A mortuary installed a concrete vault, and workers lowered Patsy's body into the plot in a nice, metal casket.
The city sued, and the case went to trial
early this year. That's when a judge ordered Davis to move his wife's remains to
a licensed cemetery. That order is on hold to give the state appeals court time
to rule.
For now, Davis visits his wife's grave each
time he walks out the front door. He puts fresh artificial flowers on it
regularly, and he washes off the marker when raindrops splatter dirt on the gray
stone. At Christmas, he said, he and other relatives hold a little prayer vigil
around the grave, which is beside an old wooden garage.
Edmiston said the man rejected several compromises from the city, including
the offer of two plots in the municipal graveyard.
While state officials say they don't know
how many people might be buried on residential lots in Alabama, burials on
private property in Alabama are not uncommon, said Sherry Bradley, deputy
environmental director for the state Department of Public Health.
While the state can regulate cemeteries,
Bradley said it doesn't have any control over family burial plots. The city
contends the grave at Davis' home is an illegal cemetery that falls under
government oversight, said Edmiston, the city lawyer.
If nothing else, Edmiston said, the appeals
court might decide what constitutes a "family burial plot" in Alabama, and
what's a cemetery.
"It would be far-reaching if they say
anyone can bury someone in their front yard if there are no drainage issues," he
said.
As it is, Davis said his five children will
bury him in the yard beside Patsy after he dies, and they and his 15
grandchildren will care for the property from then on.
"That's my perpetual care," said Davis,
referring to the city's worry about what the grave will look like after he
dies.
Davis is adamant that he won't move the body, regardless of what any court
says.
"If they get it done it'll be after I'm
gone," said Davis. "So if they order her to be moved, it's a death sentence to
me. I'll meet Mama sooner than I planned on it."
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