Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HB549 Introduced / Bill

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                    82R2874 NAJ-D
 By: Dutton H.B. No. 549


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to prohibiting the disposition of a decedent's remains by
 a person charged with certain criminal conduct against the
 decedent.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 711.002, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (l) to
 read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (l), unless [Unless] a
 decedent has left directions in writing for the disposition of the
 decedent's remains as provided in Subsection (g), the following
 persons, in the priority listed, have the right to control the
 disposition, including cremation, of the decedent's remains, shall
 inter the remains, and are liable for the reasonable cost of
 interment:
 (1)  the person designated in a written instrument
 signed by the decedent;
 (2)  the decedent's surviving spouse;
 (3)  any one of the decedent's surviving adult
 children;
 (4)  either one of the decedent's surviving parents;
 (5)  any one of the decedent's surviving adult
 siblings; or
 (6)  any adult person in the next degree of kinship in
 the order named by law to inherit the estate of the decedent.
 (l)  A person listed in Subsection (a) may not control the
 disposition of the decedent's remains if, in connection with the
 decedent's death, an indictment has been filed charging the person
 with a crime under Chapter 19, Penal Code, that involves family
 violence against the decedent.
 SECTION 2.  Section 115(c), Texas Probate Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  After notice and hearing, without regard to whether the
 deceased died intestate or testate, and subject to the prohibition
 described by Section 711.002(l), Health and Safety Code, a court
 may limit the right of a surviving spouse, whether or not the spouse
 has been designated by the deceased's will as the executor of a
 deceased spouse's estate, to control the burial and interment or
 cremation of the deceased spouse if the court finds that there is
 good cause to believe that the surviving spouse is the principal or
 an accomplice in a wilful act which resulted in the death of the
 deceased spouse.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2011.