Abstract

In the Greek legal order, although only the absence of opposition of the deceased is required for his cremation and transplantation, the consent of his relatives is additionally called for, as if power over his body now belongs to them. In this sense, it could be argued that with regard to the legal fate of the corpse there is another case of (quasi-) succession causa mortis. From this basis of analogy arises the issue of the application of provisions of the law of inheritance mutatis mutandis in this instance (the disposal of the corpse). In this framework, the consent of the deceased shall be subject (directly or by analogy) to the legal status of a will (e.g. formality, revocability, defects, etc.); the relatives, to whom the law leaves the matter should be treated as intestate quasi-successors. Their disputes shall be solved via interim measures, although the decision would most probably exhaust the object in the case.

Full Text
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