GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
1989 SESSION
CHAPTER 222
AN ACT TO CLARIFY THE DISPOSITION OF UNCLAIMED BODIES.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
Section 1. G.S. 130A-415 reads as rewritten:
"§ 130A-415. Unclaimed bodies; disposition.
(a) All Any
person, including officers, employees and agents of the State or of any
unit of local government in the State; State, all undertakers
doing business within the State; State, hospitals, nursing homes or
other institutions, or any person having charge or control of an
unclaimed having physical possession of a dead body shall immediately
notify and, upon the request of the Commission of Anatomy, deliver the dead
body to the Commission of Anatomy. make reasonable efforts to contact
relatives of the deceased or other persons who may wish to claim the body for
final disposition. If the body remains unclaimed for final disposition
for 10 days, the person having possession shall notify the Commission of Anatomy.
Upon request of the Commission of Anatomy, the person having possession shall
deliver the dead body to the Commission of Anatomy at a time and place
specified by the Commission of Anatomy or shall permit the Commission of
Anatomy to take and remove the body. The Commission of Anatomy may take
and remove the dead body. No reward or fee shall be paid for notifying the
Commission of Anatomy. The person having charge or control of an unclaimed body
shall make reasonable efforts to notify any interested person of the decedent's
death. The recipient to which the Commission of Anatomy delivers the body shall
pay all expenses for the embalming and delivery of the body, and for the
reasonable efforts made to notify the persons.
(b) For the purposes
of this Part, an unclaimed body means a dead body which is not claimed for
final disposition and which, as determined by the person having charge or
control of the dead body, probably will not be claimed for final disposition
within 10 days of the deceased's death. The unclaimed body shall remain in the
charge or control of the person for a period of 10 days unless the period is
shortened by the county director of social services upon determination that the
dead body will not be claimed for final disposition within 10 days of the
decedent's death. Upon expiration of the period, the person having charge or
control of the unclaimed body will deliver it to the Commission of Anatomy at a
time and place specified by the Commission of Anatomy or permit the Commission
of Anatomy to take and remove the body. All dead bodies not claimed for
final disposition within 10 days of the decedent's death may be received and
delivered by the Commission of Anatomy pursuant to the authority contained in
G.S. 143B-204 and this Part and in accordance with the rules of the Commission
of Anatomy. Upon receipt of a body by the Commission of Anatomy all
interests in and rights to the unclaimed dead body shall vest in the Commission
of Anatomy. The recipient to which the Commission of Anatomy delivers the
body shall pay all expenses for the embalming and delivery of the body, and for
the reasonable expenses arising from efforts to notify relatives or others.
(c) All dead bodies
not claimed for final disposition within 10 days of the decedent's death may be
received and delivered by the Commission of Anatomy pursuant to the authority
contained in G.S. 143B- 204 and this Part and in accordance with its rules. All
interests in and rights to dead bodies unclaimed for final disposition within
10 days of the decedent's death and received by the Commission of Anatomy shall
vest in the Commission of Anatomy. Should the Commission of Anatomy
decline to receive a dead body, the person with possession shall inform the
director of social services of the county in which the body is located.
The director of social services of that county shall arrange for prompt final
disposition of the body, either by cremation or burial. Reasonable costs
of disposition and of efforts made to notify relatives and others shall be
considered funeral expenses and shall be paid in accordance with G.S. 28A-19-6
and G.S. 28A-19-8. If those expenses cannot be satisfied from the
decedent's estate, they shall be borne by the decedent's county of residence.
If the deceased is not a resident of this State, or if the county of residence
is unknown, those expenses shall be borne by the county in which the death
occurred.
(d) No autopsy shall be performed on an unclaimed body without the written consent of the Commission of Anatomy except that written consent is not required for an autopsy performed pursuant to Part 2 of this Article.
(e) Due caution shall be taken to shield the unclaimed body from public view.
(f) Notwithstanding anything contained in this section, an unclaimed body shall not mean a dead body for which the deceased has made a gift pursuant to Part 3 of this Article.
(g) Nothing in this Part shall require the officers, employees or agents of a county to notify the Commission of Anatomy regarding the bodies of minors who were in the custody of the county at the time of death and whose final disposition will be arranged by the county. In the absence of notification, the expenses of the final disposition shall be a charge upon the county having custody.
(h) The provisions of this Part shall not apply to bodies within the jurisdiction of the medical examiner under G.S. 130A-383 or 130A-384.
(i) In addition to the other duties of the Commission of Anatomy, when the Commission of Anatomy is notified by the Lifeguardianship Council of the Association of Retarded Citizens of North Carolina, Inc., that the Council intends to claim a body, the Commission shall release the body to the Council. The Lifeguardianship Council shall notify the Commission of Anatomy within 24 hours after death of its intent to claim a body for burial or other humane and caring disposition."
Sec. 2. This act shall become effective October 1, 1989, and applies to deaths occurring on or after that date.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 5th day of June, 1989.