Mortuary Law Chapter 10 Flashcards
Contracts entered into between members of the public and funeral homes to provide for funeral goods and services in the future upon death of the contract beneficiary.
Pre-Need Contracts
Typically prefunds the contract either through a payment made to the funeral home at the time the contract is entered into or by the purchase of an insurance policy upon the life of the contract beneficiary.
The Purchaser of the Preneed Contract
The funeral home carries out the terms of the contract and provides the promised funeral goods and services.
When the Contract Beneficiary Dies
- Guaranteed fixed price contracts
- Non-guaranteed
Preneed Contracts May be:
The funeral home guarantees to the purchaser that the price for the funeral to be provided in the future will not exceed the amount of funds paid on the contract plus any accruals thereon.
Guaranteed Fixed Price Contracts
THe funeral home is only agreeing that amounts paid on the contract, plus accurals, will be applied toward the price of the future funeral. In the event that the price of the future funeral exceeds the amounts set aside to pay for it, the purchaser of the decedent’s estate will have to make up the balance.
Non-Guaranteed Contracts
May be terminated by the purchaser at any time proior to the death of the beneficiary with the purchaser receiving a refund of all or some part of the funds paid on the contract, plus all or some of the accruals thereon. The amount that is returned is often determined by state law.
Revocable Contracts
There purchaser may not cancel it. However approximately two-thirds of the states allow the purchaser an unconditional right to transfer an irrevocable preneed contract to another funeral home.
Irrevocable Contracts
Although preneed contracts have existed for many years, it is only in the past _____ years that their use has been widespread.
Fourty
- Funeral homes actively promoting preneed arrangements
- Emergence of national marketing programs sponsored by large insurance companies, funeral home chains and state funeral home associations.
Made the Trend Towards Preneed Explosive
By the year ____ funeral directors wil be writing two and one-half million preneed contracts per year. If this number holds up, the number of preneed contracts written on an annual basis will soon surpass at-need contracts.
2015
With the emergence of preneed funeral contracts, state legislatures became concerned with the opportunity for _____ that was inherent in these arrangements.
Fraud
The contractual obligations of the funeral director were often not performed for up to _____ years after they recieved payment, the legislatures enacted various provisions to ensure that sellers of preneed funeral contracts had sufficient funds in the future to furfill their contractual obligations.
Twenty
Require the seller of preneed funeral contracts to place all or some part of the preneed funds in a trust. When the contract beneficiary died adn the funeral services were provided, the preneed funds could be withdrawn and paid to the funeral home.
Laws Enacted by the Legislatures
Now enacted in all 50 states and Washington DC.
- The trend is requiring an amount less that 100% of the preneed funds and interest thereon must remain in trust until the death occurs.
- Usually require the funds to be deposited in insured banks, trust companies, or savings and loan accounts.
- Some states permit funeral directors to commingle the preneed accounts into one master account to that greater returns can be realized.
Preneed Trust Laws and/or Regulations
- Nearly one-half of the states require a business selling preneed funeral services to be a licensed funeral home.
- Nearly every state allows businesses to sell funeral goods on a preneed basis without the necessity of having a funeral home license.
- In most states, the market is open to third party sellers, especially cemeteries which seek to sell caskets and vaults to consumers on a preneed basis.
- These sellers often use aggressive marketing programs to promote their preneed contract sales.
Funeral Service License and Preneed Contracts
- Direct mail
- Telesales
- Door-to-door solicitation
Aggressive Marketing Techniques
- These laws have been attacked by third part sellers as unconsitiutional deprivations of property and the right to contract.
- Some states which limit or restrict door-to-door and other means of direct solicitation have been challenged as unconstitutional infringements of free speech.
Trusting Laws (Particularly 100% Trusting Laws) Deprive Preneed Sellers of Available Income
For the most part, the courts have upheld the validity of state preneed laws as:
Legitimate Exercises of Police Power
Third party sellers challenged the 95% trusting requirements of the Illinois preneed statute. Noting that the average time lapse of 29 years between payment and performance invited fraud, the court upheld the law as a reasonable regulation enacted in the public interest.
Memorial Gardens Assoc., Inc. v. Smith
The court upheld a 100% trusting requirement. The decision held that the Idaho preneed law was not unconstitutional even if it did deprive legitimate businesses of operating funds since it was a reasonabe measure taken persuant to the state’s power to prevent fraud and deceit.
Messerli v. Monarch Memorial Gardens
Have also upheld challenges to state licensing laws which require funeral directors to sell preneed funeral services.
Federal Appellate Courts
The appellant argued that it was irration for the state to require an individual to have the training and education required of a funeral director in order to simply sell pre-need funeral services. The court refused to second guess the Virginia General Assembly’s licensing law’s requirement. It held that the legislature may have rationally determined that keeping the arrangements of funerals in the hands of licensed funeral directors would benefit the public by insuring competence in funeral arrangements. It therefore upheld the law.
Guardian Plans Inc. v. Teague
- A federal district court has upheld a West Virginia preneed law against claims that it violated the right of free speech.
- Law in question banned door-to-door and telephone solicitation of preneed funeral contracts.
- The court, noting past incidents of fraud and undue influence by third-part sellers held that the state has a significant governmental interest in protecting the public from improper solicitation practices.
- Since the ban only limited the time, place and manner of speech and not the content of the speech, and since the preneed sellers had ample alternative means of soicitation (direct mail, mass advertisement), te court found that the solicitation restrictions were rationally related to a legitimate state purpose.
With Regard to First Ammendment Claims: National Funeral Services, Inc. v. Rockefeller