Court upholds Guerra decision
The 13th Court of Appeals this month upheld a judgment against a funeral firm that moved the body of the late Marcos Guerra of San Benito from its gravesite without the family’s permission.
The appellate court also reduced exemplary damages awarded to Guerra’s wife and daughters from $4 million to $1.5 million, which a Cameron County jury rendered against Service Corporation International (SCI) and SCI Texas Funeral Services, Inc., doing business as Mont Meta Memorial Park in San Benito.
However, the appellate court affirmed the jury’s judgment of an additional $2.3 million in liability and actual damages for Guerra’s family members for the mental anguish they sustained.
SCI attorney Charles C. Murray and the Guerras’ attorney Richard G. Roth, both of McAllen, were not immediately available Monday for comment.
At issue was the double sale of a plot, burial of a body in the wrong space and the removal of a body without the family’s permission.
Guerra was initially buried in late 2001 in a space that SCI had sold to another family. When then-General Manager Jaye Gaspard, who has since died, discovered the mistake, he called the Guerras to notify them, asking if they would be amenable to having their father’s grave moved, the appellate court opinion states.
The Guerras did not agree.
According to the appellate court’s opinion, "despite the family’s refusal, the Mont Meta grounds crew uncovered Mr. Guerra’s coffin and moved it" 12 to 18 inches into another space.
The record is unclear as to when the coffin was moved, the opinion points out. Gaspard subsequently sent a letter to the Guerras informing them that the situation had been resolved, but the letter did not state that Guerra’s remains had been moved.
According to the opinion, the Guerras visited the grave in early 2002 and noticed that the dirt above the grave had been disturbed.
"The Guerras questioned Mont Meta about the freshly-dug earth, and Gaspard responded with a letter stating that Mont Meta was resodding the cemetery in preparation for the holidays and because of drought conditions," the opinion states.
"Doubting the veracity of the letter, the Guerras performed their own probe of the grave site and discovered that the coffin had been moved," the appellate court’s opinion notes.
"You know, we were always wondering where our father was. It was very hard to hear how this company stole our father from his grave and moved him. That was hard. And I pray none of you have to go through this," Guerra’s daughter Gracie Little testified during the civil trial held in the 404th District Court, the opinion noted.
The jury found SCI liable to the Guerras for trespass, negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress for disturbing Guerra’s grave.
The appellate court overturned all but one argument, finding that the state court’s charge to the jury authorizing exemplary damages in excess of the cap had been in error and thus, the adjustment.
SCI could request a rehearing before the appellate court.


