An Act To Clarify Access to Landlocked Ancient and Family Burying Grounds and To Clarify the Definition of Ancient Burying Ground
Sec. 1. 13 MRSA §1101-A, sub-§1, as enacted by PL 1999, c. 700, §2, is amended to read:
Existence of an ancient burying ground may be documented in family papers, including, but not limited to, deeds or manuscripts or published records of the history of the county or municipality where the burying ground is located or on historic or current maps of the area where the burying ground is located. Existence of an ancient burying ground may also be documented in the records of the register of deeds in the county where the burying ground was located when it was established or in the records of the municipality where the burying ground was when it was established, but the lack of documentation does not negate the existence of, or its status as, an ancient burying ground. The lack of apparent marked boundaries for an ancient burying ground does not negate its existence or status as an ancient burying ground.
Sec. 2. 13 MRSA §1101-B, sub-§1, as amended by PL 2013, c. 421, §2, is further amended to read:
Sec. 3. 13 MRSA §1101-B, sub-§1-A is enacted to read:
The owner of the land surrounding an ancient burying ground or a family burying ground may designate the route a person must use to access the burying ground and is not liable for any injuries sustained by a person accessing the burying ground using the designated route or within the boundaries of the burying ground. The designated route may not present undue obstructions to passage. If an unobstructed route to the burying ground does not exist, the owner of the land surrounding the ancient burying ground or family burying ground shall file a notarized document listing all obstructions with the municipal clerk of the municipality where the ancient burying ground or family burying ground is situated.
A person who owns a parcel of land surrounding an ancient burying ground or a family burying ground may file with the municipal clerk of the municipality where the ancient burying ground or family burying ground is situated a notarized document allowing access to that burying ground to a spouse, descendant or other relative of a person buried in the ancient burying ground or family burying ground or the designated agent of the spouse, descendant or other relative.
Sec. 4. 13 MRSA §1142, as amended by PL 1991, c. 412, §1, is further amended to read:
§ 1142. Family burying grounds
When a person appropriates for a family burying ground a piece of land containing not more than 1/4 of an acre, causes a description of it to be recorded in the registry of deeds of the same county or by the clerk of the town where it is situated and substantially marks the bounds of the burying ground or encloses it with a fence, it is exempt from attachment and execution. No subsequent conveyance of it is valid while any person is interred in the burying ground; but it must remain to the person who appropriated, recorded and marked that burying ground and to that person's heirs as a burial place forever. If property surrounding a burying ground appropriated pursuant to this section is conveyed, the property is conveyed by the person who appropriated the property or by an heir of that person and the conveyance causes the burying ground to be inaccessible from any public way, the conveyance is made subject to an easement for the benefit of the spouse, ancestors and , descendants and other relatives of any person interred in the burying ground or the designated agent of the spouse, ancestors, descendants and other relatives of any person interred in the burying ground. The easement may be used only by persons only to walk in a direct route from the public way nearest the burying ground to the burying ground at reasonable hours during daylight hours. The owner of the property surrounding the family burying ground may designate, pursuant to section 1101-B, subsection 1-A, the direct route a person must use to access the family burying ground and is not liable for any injuries sustained by a person accessing the family burying ground while using the designated route or within the boundaries of the family burying ground.
summary
This bill amends the law governing family burying grounds and ancient burying grounds in the following ways.
1. It amends the definition of "ancient burying ground."
2. It provides that a municipality or its caretaker may access an ancient burying ground surrounded by privately owned land annually or as determined necessary by the municipality or its designated caretaker.
3. It provides that a person who owns land that surrounds an ancient burying ground or a family burying ground must provide a descendant or other relative of a person buried in the burying ground, or a designated agent of the descendant or other relative, access to the burying ground for the purposes of protecting and preserving it.
4. If property surrounding a burying ground is conveyed causing the burying ground to be inaccessible from a public way, the bill provides that the conveyance is made subject to an easement for the benefit of the spouse, ancestors, descendants and other relatives or the designated agent of the spouse, ancestors, descendants and other relatives of any person interred in the burying ground. It also requires that the owner of the property surrounding the family burying ground designate the direct route a person must use to access the family burying ground and is not liable for injuries sustained by a person accessing the family burying ground.