2012 North Dakota Century Code Title 23 Health and Safety Chapter 23-21.1 Cemetery Organizations
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CHAPTER 23-21.1
CEMETERY ORGANIZATIONS
23-21.1-01. Applicability of statute.
Any person, firm, corporation, or other form of organization organized or engaging in the
business under the laws of the state of North Dakota, or wheresoever organized and engaging
in the business in the state of North Dakota, of the ownership, maintenance, or operation of a
cemetery, providing lots or other interment space therein for the remains of human bodies,
except such organizations which are churches or religious or established fraternal societies,
charitable associations, or incorporated cities or other political subdivisions of the state of North
Dakota owning, maintaining, or operating cemeteries, is subject to the provisions of this chapter.
23-21.1-02. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
1. "Nonperpetual care cemetery" means all other cemeteries, mausoleums,
columbariums, or other organizations subject to the provisions of this chapter.
2. "Perpetual care cemetery" means any cemetery, mausoleum, columbarium, or other
organization provided for in this chapter which has deposited in its perpetual care fund
an initial minimum amount required by law and thereafter deposits in its perpetual care
fund not less than the amounts set forth in section 23-21.1-03.
23-21.1-02.1. License to operate a perpetual care cemetery - Fee.
No organization may operate as a perpetual care cemetery unless licensed on forms
provided by the state department of health by the recorder of the county within which the
cemetery is located, unless the board of county commissioners designates a different official.
The license must be renewed by or before July first of each year. Prior to issuance or renewal of
a license, the recorder, or designated official, shall determine if the applicant is in full
compliance with the provisions of this chapter. When applying for a license renewal, the
applicant shall report to the recorder, or designated official, the number of spaces sold, the
gross amount of receipts from the sale of spaces, and the amount of money transferred to the
perpetual care trust fund during the organization's previous fiscal year. The license fee must be
five dollars per year, except that any perpetual care cemetery which has sold less than ten
spaces during the previous fiscal year may not be required to pay a license fee.
23-21.1-02.2. Revocation or nonrenewal of license to operate a perpetual care
cemetery.
The recorder, or designated official, shall revoke or refuse to renew a license to operate a
perpetual care cemetery if such organization fails to comply with the provisions of this chapter.
When the recorder, or designated official, revokes or refuses to renew a license to operate a
perpetual care cemetery, a notice of the action must be published in the official county
newspaper of the county wherein the cemetery is located. When an organization's license to
operate a perpetual care cemetery is not current or has been revoked, the organization shall
cease to make sales or transfers of burial spaces.
23-21.1-03. Creation of perpetual care fund.
1. Any organization subject to this chapter which is organized or commences business in
this state and desires to operate as a perpetual care cemetery, before selling or
disposing of any interment space or lots, shall establish a minimum perpetual care and
maintenance guarantee fund of twenty-five thousand dollars in cash, except that the
minimum perpetual care and maintenance guarantee fund for organizations in
operation on July 1, 1963, must be five thousand dollars. The perpetual care and
maintenance guarantee fund must be permanently set aside in trust to be
administered under the jurisdiction of the district court of the county wherein the
cemetery is located. The district court shall have jurisdiction over the approval of
trustees, reports and accounting of trustees, amount of surety bond required, and
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investment of funds as provided by chapters 59-09, 59-10, 59-11, 59-12, 59-13, 59-14,
59-15, 59-16, 59-17, 59-18, and 59-19 relating to the administration of trust estates.
Only the income from such fund may be used for the care and maintenance of the
cemetery for which it was established. All such organizations shall submit at least
annually, to the district court, such reports as are required. The clerks of each of the
district courts shall transmit copies of all reports, and rules and regulations enacted by
the organization, to the state department of health and the commissioner of financial
institutions.
To continue to operate as a perpetual care cemetery, any such organization shall set
aside and deposit in the perpetual care fund not less than the following amounts for
lots of interment space thereafter sold or disposed of:
a. A minimum of twenty percent of the gross selling price with a minimum of twenty
dollars for each adult space, whichever is the greater.
b. A minimum of twenty percent of the gross selling price for each child's space with
a minimum of five dollars for each space up to forty-two inches [1006.8
millimeters] in length or ten dollars for each space up to sixty inches [1524
millimeters] in length, whichever is the greater.
c. A minimum of twenty percent of the gross selling price with a minimum of one
hundred dollars for each space or crypt in a mausoleum, whichever is the greater,
except a mausoleum located in a cemetery covered by a perpetual care fund
which consists of at least twenty percent of the proceeds received by the
cemetery from the sale of cemetery lots, in which event, the perpetual care fund
for the public or community mausoleum itself shall contain a minimum of twenty
percent of the cost of the construction of such public or community mausoleum.
d. A minimum of twenty percent of the gross selling price with a minimum of ten
dollars for each inurnment niche in a columbarium, except a columbarium located
in a cemetery covered by a perpetual care fund which consists of at least twenty
percent of the proceeds received by the cemetery from the sale of cemetery lots,
in which event, the perpetual care fund for the public or community columbarium
itself shall contain a minimum of twenty percent of the cost of the construction of
such public or community columbarium.
e. A minimum of twenty percent of the gross selling price with a minimum of one
hundred dollars, whichever is the greater, for each interment space in crypt
gardens or any other structure or device by whatever name, established or
constructed wholly or partially above the natural surface of the ground, for the
interment of any dead human body.
There is no required perpetual care fund deposit on spaces provided without charge
for paupers and infants.
23-21.1-03.1. Bond.
Each person charged by an organization with the statutory responsibility of setting aside
and depositing funds in a perpetual care fund, before entering upon the discharge of the
person's duties and annually thereafter, shall furnish a bond in the penal sum of an amount to
be determined by the district court of the county wherein the organization is located. The size of
the bond must be at least as large as the amount of money the person or the person's
predecessor deposited in the perpetual care fund during the organization's previous fiscal year.
23-21.1-04. Previously existing organizations.
Any such organization subject to the provisions of this chapter which was organized and
engaged in business prior to the effective date of this chapter shall be a perpetual care
cemetery if it at all times subsequent to the effective date of this chapter complies with the
requirements of a perpetual care cemetery as set forth in section 23-21.1-03.
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23-21.1-05. Nonperpetual care cemeteries.
Each nonperpetual care cemetery shall post in a conspicuous place in the office or offices
where sales are conducted a legible sign stating: "This is a nonperpetual care cemetery". The
lettering of this sign must be of suitable size so it is easily read at a distance of fifty feet [15.24
meters].
Each nonperpetual care cemetery shall also have printed or stamped, at the head of all of
its contracts, deeds, statements, letterheads, and advertising material, the legend: "This is a
nonperpetual care cemetery" and may not sell any lot or interment space therein unless the
purchaser thereof is informed in writing that the cemetery is a nonperpetual care cemetery.
23-21.1-06. Nonperpetual care cemetery's qualification as perpetual care cemetery.
Any nonperpetual care cemetery after the effective date of this chapter may become a
perpetual care cemetery by placing in the perpetual care trust fund twenty-five thousand dollars
or five thousand dollars per acre [.40 hectare] of all property sold, whichever is the greater, and
shall comply with the requirements for a perpetual care cemetery as provided in section
23-21.1-03.
23-21.1-06.1. Cemetery lot - Neglect - Resale.
Any cemetery lot, transferred to an individual owner by a cemetery organization governed
by the provisions of this chapter, in which no interment has been made and which remains
uncared for or neglected by the owner for a period of thirty or more years may, except when the
owner is entitled to perpetual care of the lot, be resold by the cemetery organization after the
publication of notice of its intent to resell the lot. The notice must be published for three
successive weeks in the official newspaper of the county in which the lot is located.
23-21.1-07. Unlawful acts.
It is unlawful for any organization subject to the provisions of this chapter to pay or offer to
pay to, or for any person, firm, corporation, or limited liability company to receive directly or
indirectly a commission or bonus or rebate or other things of value, for or in connection with the
sale of any interment space, lot, or part thereof, in any cemetery described in section
23-21.1-01. The provisions of this section do not apply to an individual regularly employed and
supervised by such organization.
23-21.1-08. Unlawful acts - Denial of privilege of interment because of race or color.
It is unlawful for any organization subject to the provisions of this chapter to deny the
privilege of interment of the remains of any deceased person in any cemetery described in
section 23-21.1-01 solely because of the race or color of such deceased person. Any contract,
agreement, deed, covenant, restriction, or charter provision at any time entered into, or bylaw,
rule, or regulation adopted or put in force, either subsequent or prior to the effective date of this
chapter, authorizing, permitting, or requiring any organization subject to the provisions of this
chapter to deny such privilege of interment because of race or color of such deceased person is
hereby declared to be null and void and in conflict with the public policy of this state. No
organization subject to the provisions of this chapter or any director, officer, agent, employee, or
trustee thereof or therefor, shall be liable for damages or other relief, or be subject to any action
in any court otherwise having jurisdiction in the premises by reason of refusing to commit any
act declared unlawful herein.
23-21.1-09. Penalties.
Any person violating any of the provisions of this chapter is guilty of a class A misdemeanor.
23-21.1-10. Continuing penalties.
Each day any person, firm, corporation, or limited liability company violates any provision of
this chapter, except the commission of any act declared unlawful in section 23-21.1-08, must be
deemed to be a separate and distinct offense.
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23-21.1-11. Representations as to speculative investment prohibited.
No organization subject to the provisions of this chapter nor any person representing it may
advertise or represent, in connection with the sale or attempted sale of any interment space,
that the same is or will be a desirable speculative investment for resale purposes.
23-21.1-12. Severability.
If any provision of this chapter or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is
held invalid, such invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this chapter which
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of
this chapter are declared to be severable.
23-21.1-13. Effect on existing cemetery organizations - Enforcement.
The provisions of this chapter in no way affect existing statutes relating to the
administration, regulation, or registration of all cemetery organizations. It is the duty of the
state's attorney or the attorney general to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
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