This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
There are no laws that prohibit home burial, but you must check local zoning laws before establishing a home cemetery or burying on private land. Must be embalmed OR refrigerated after 24 hours. Reporting of contagious or communicable disease to attending physician is recommended.
There are no laws that prohibit home burial, but you must check local zoning laws before establishing a home cemetery or burying on private land. Must be embalmed OR refrigerated after 24 hours. Reporting of contagious or communicable disease to attending physician is recommended.
The Short Answer Surprisingly, interments on private land are technically allowed in almost every state. By 'technically', I mean that most states don't have laws prohibiting them. However, laying a loved one to rest on personal property requires permission and adherence to numerous rules and regulations.
Can You Bury a Body at Home? There are no state laws in Ohio that prohibit home burial, and state law allows family cemeteries.
As used in this division, "family cemetery" means a cemetery containing the human remains of persons, at least three-fourths of whom have a common ancestor or who are the spouse or adopted child of that common ancestor. Section 4767.021 | Powers of commission and superintendent.
Ing to Nolo Legal Encyclopedia, no state laws prohibit burying a body on your own property in Ohio. The Ohio Attorney General has explicitly stated that no board of township trustees or local board of may prohibit burial on private property.
The Ohio Department of Commerce requires that every cemetery in Ohio be registered with its Division of Real Estate, unless there have been no interments in the past 25 years, or, the cemetery is considered a private family cemetery.
The Ohio Department of Commerce Division of Real Estate and Professional Licensing, registers Ohio cemeteries operated by a company or person, church, religious society, established fraternal organization, or political subdivision.
When a body is brought into the state, a certificate of service must be filed with the local registrar after disposition. There are no state statutes that specifically permit or prohibit home burial.
Section 3705.17 | Burial permit required - records to be kept. The body of a person whose death occurs in this state shall not be interred, deposited in a vault or tomb, cremated, or otherwise disposed of by a funeral director until a burial permit is issued by a local registrar or sub-registrar of vital statistics.