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It would appear that your cousin's father inherited the house. This does not say that she in turn inherited from her father. Does this cousin have any other siblings? Is so she may have only inherited part of her father's estate and therefore part of the grave.The cousin involved, her father lived with the grandparents and inherited their house.
First find out how many can be buried in your Grandparents Grave if you say there are four already before latest interment this brings it up to five good chance there is just one more place left,Most old family plots where for six,It would appear that your cousin's father inherited the house. This does not say that she in turn inherited from her father. Does this cousin have any other siblings? Is so she may have only inherited part of her father's estate and therefore part of the grave.
I would call them out on this. Arrange a meeting with this person to express your unhappiness.
Possibly. Your grandparents should have had 'grave deeds' or a 'grant of right of burial' from the cemetery concerned. (I've one of these for a grave in Glasnevin going back to 1846.) This would have formed part of their estate. If there are cemetery rules on monuments etc. these should be on or associated with the grave deeds. So you would need to check with the executor of the estate of the last surviving grandparent on what happened to this document. As this executor may well be dead or unknown, you could contact the graveyard concerned, but I'm not certain if they are under any obligation to respond to you as the grave or the right of burial therein may have passed to your cousin as part of your grandparents' estate.The cousin involved, her father lived with the grandparents and inherited their house. Does that mean that he in turn inherits their grave and can it then be passed down in the line of the family only?
This is an important point and something of which executors should be aware. It's only too easy for grave deeds to go missing, rights of burial not to be transferred etc. It's one more job for the executor.It’s one thing people often forget when going through probate/passing on via a will. A grave is technically an asset and has an owner (hence usually has an owner cert).
Actually, they are not all over the place. Here's a bit of graveyard trivia. In bygone days graves were oriented towards the east, i.e. to the rising sun on the day of burial, so they sort of follow a crescent. After time it looks random.But straight lines like modern graveyards it does not have, it's all over the place.
That is exactly what I was expecting you would find out, If I found myself in your position I would make a visit to the Grave on the death of your Cousin I would then bring the subject up there could well be a communuication problem when the headstone was put up and engravedThe latest I have on this problem is that the cousins father, being the last family member living at home took over the house and farm upon the death of his parents. Apparently it is custom in this particular part of the country for the grave to pass down this line of the family. I still don't know what the legal position is. Hope I can get to the bottom of this soon.
Thanks for all the earlier comments.
The legal position is provided for by the Cemeteries Clauses Act 1847 http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1847/act/65/enacted/en/print.html. Rights of burial can be assigned or bequeathed.Apparently it is custom in this particular part of the country for the grave to pass down this line of the family. I still don't know what the legal position is.
The legal position is provided for by the Cemeteries Clauses Act 1847 http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1847/act/65/enacted/en/print.html. Rights of burial can be assigned or bequeathed.
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