Source: http://www.lawserver.com/law/state/tennessee/tn-code/tennessee_code_68-4-103
Timestamp: 2013-05-23 07:32:33
Document Index: 646935245

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 68', '§ 68', '§ 2', '§ 2569', '§ 5379', '§ 2', '§ 53', '§ 4', '§ 4', '§ 2']

Tennessee Code 68-4-103. Persons dying in publicly-supported institutions or to be buried at public expense -- Notice to relatives -- Notice to chief medical examiner -- Removal of body -- Embalming -- Infectious or contagious cases :: Lawserver LawServer - Laws, Legal Information and Lawyers
Home > For Everyone > Health and Medicine > Death and Dying > Death > Tennessee Code 68-4-103. Persons dying in publicly-supported institutions or to be buried at public expense -- Notice to relatives -- Notice to chief medical examiner -- Removal of body -- Embalming -- Infectious or contagious cases Death For this topic: Go back to the topic homeTopic HomeJoin the forum for this topicForumSign up for Email related to this topicEmailRSS feed for this topicRSSFeedbackFeedback	Search the Tennessee Code
Tennessee Code 68-4-103. Persons dying in publicly-supported institutions or to be buried at public expense -- Notice to relatives -- Notice to chief medical examiner -- Removal of body -- Embalming -- Infectious or contagious cases Tennessee Code > Title 68 > Health > Chapter 4 > § 68-4-103. Persons dying in publicly-supported institutions or to be buried at public expense — Notice to relatives — Notice to chief medical examiner — Removal of body — Embalming — Infectious or contagious casesCurrent as of: 2010Check for updates(a) Whenever a person dies in any hospital, infirmary, mental health institute, poorhouse, penitentiary, house of correction, workhouse, jail, or other charitable or penal institution that is supported in whole or in part at public expense, or whenever a body is delivered to a public official for the purpose of burial at public expense, it is the duty of the public official or of the custodian, superintendent or active head of such institution to immediately notify the nearest or other relative of the person, if any relative be known, of the person's death. (b) (1) After the notification pursuant to subsection (a), the custodian, superintendent or active head of the institution or public official shall then hold the body of the deceased person not less than ninety-six (96) hours, and if at the end of that time no relative claims the dead body and no provision has been made for its interment other than at public expense, then the custodian, superintendent or active head or public official shall notify the chief medical examiner or the chief medical examiner's representative that the custodian, superintendent or active head or public official has the body, and, upon demand by the chief medical examiner or the chief medical examiner's representative, shall deliver or surrender the body to the chief medical examiner or the chief medical examiner's representative or to either of their order. (2) Notification shall be made in any manner that the chief medical examiner shall direct and all the expense of notification and delivery or surrender of the body shall be at the expense of and shall be borne by the institution obtaining the dead body. (c) If the chief medical examiner or the chief medical examiner's representative, upon receipt of the notification, does not, within twenty-four (24) hours, make a demand for the body, then it shall be buried as provided by law. (d) No custodian, superintendent or head of a charitable or penal institution or public official shall charge, receive or accept money or other consideration for any body. (e) The chief medical examiner may, by proper instructions, have the body embalmed by such person as the chief medical examiner may direct, and, to the person performing this work under the chief medical examiner's instructions the institution receiving the body shall pay a reasonable compensation. (f) No person who has died of any contagious or infectious disease shall be held to be within the provisions of §§ 68-4-102 â€” 68-4-109, unless proper precautions, as prescribed by the chief medical examiner, are taken to prevent the spread of contagions or infections.[Acts 1947, ch. 163, § 2; C. Supp. 1950, § 2569.9 (Williams, § 5379.2); Acts 1955, ch. 34, § 2; T.C.A. (orig. ed.), § 53-505; Acts 1984, ch. 525, § 4; 1990, ch. 598, § 4; 1996, ch. 744, § 2.] Previous sectionChapter 4 Table of ContentsNext section ________________________________________________________________________