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Usually, the executor is responsible for arranging the funeral, covering the costs of the funeral arrangements, and managing the estate after death. With legal access to the estate of the person who has died, the executor may be able to fund the funeral costs through the savings or assets left behind.
The ashes are given to the person who has applied for cremation with the funeral director. The ashes can be collected by the applicant directly from the crematorium or the applicant can nominate the funeral director to collect them on their behalf.
Nobody owns a body \u2013 there is no property in a dead body. The person entitled to possession of the body is the person who is under a duty to dispose of the body. A crematorium authority must hand over the ashes to the person who delivered the body for cremation.
In the past, St. Louis Cremation scattered unclaimed cremains in a dignified manner, or purchased a vault to bury several sets at a time. Now, they \u2014 as well as other funeral homes \u2014 send them to the Odd Fellows columbarium.
Missouri law permits the establishment of family burial grounds of less than one acre in size. The cemetery must be deeded in trust to the county commission, and you must record the deed with the county clerk within 60 days.
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If your loved one is having a burial in a traditional grave, mausoleum or vault, you can usually put whatever you want inside or on top of the coffin. Your funeral director will let you know if there are any exceptions.
Who has the right to possess cremation ashes? The right to possess the ashes is likely to be \u201cthe executor*, or whoever was at the charge of the funeral\u201d or basically the person who signed the contract with the funeral director.
Most bodies are buried in established cemeteries, but burial on private property is possible in Missouri. The burial ground must not exceed one acre, and it must be deeded in trust to the county commission. You must file the deed with the county clerk within 60 days.
Read up on the local laws in your state. Most states make it legal to take a body home from the hospital, nursing home, or other places of death and bury it on your private property. As stated above, only 3 states prohibit home burials: Indiana, California, and Washington State.
Your loved one's ashes don't have to stay together either. Families can choose to split the ashes of the deceased among the wider family, where the individual families can choose what they want to do with them.

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