In Church of the Holy Spirit of Wayland v. Heinrich, (MA Sup. Jud. Ct., March 14, 202), the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rejected claims by families attempting to prevent the disinterment and relocation of cremated remains sought by a church in order to facilitate the sale of its churchyard property. The court said in part:
This case concerns the scope of rights conveyed by a set of burial certificates, as sold by a church to its parishioners. After dwindling membership compelled the Church of the Holy Spirit of Wayland ... to close and sell its property, do the certificates permit the church to disinter and relocate the cremated remains buried on that property despite the objections of the decedents' families?
Although we acknowledge the sensitive -- even sacred -- nature of the subject matter of this dispute, we conclude that the burial certificates' unambiguous language permits the disinterment and that no common-law right held by the families prevents it.