How 38 Monks Took on the Funeral Cartel and Won

By Conor Friedersdorf

Jul 22 2011, 8:30 AM ET 5

Their victory in federal court means they can sell caskets without a license -- 
and has implications for entrepreneurs all over the United States

After Hurricane Katrina, the 38 monks at Saint Joseph Abbey in Covington, 
Louisiana had a problem: they'd long supported themselves by harvesting trees 
on their woodland property, but damage done by the storm made continuing to do 
so impossible. If the community was going to survive as a place of communal 
prayer, education, and simple labor, it needed to find an acceptable new source 
of steady income. But what would it be?

Abbot Justin Brown thought selling caskets might be the answer. For 
generations, the monks had buried their dead in simple wooden boxes that they 
made on site. During the 1990s, two Louisiana bishops had been buried in 
caskets from the abbey, generating a bit of publicity, and even years later, 
the monks got occasional inquiries from folks who sought something similarly 
austere for a funeral. 

Surveying the market, the monks knew that they could produce and sell caskets 
much cheaper than local funeral parlors, where grieving consumers paid a 
substantial markup, or were forced into package deals that obscured the actual 
price of the casket. Thus a small business was born: the monks invested 
$200,000, converted an old cafeteria building into a professional woodshop, and 
opened St. Joseph's Woodworks in 2007 on All Saints Day. Little did they know 
that they were about to be threatened with fines, or even jail time, unless 
they abandoned their plans. Or that they'd have to fight in federal court for 
the right to sell their simple caskets (a wooden box, a lid, and two metal 
handles), a case that they won Thursday when the U.S. District Court in Eastern 
Louisiana ruled that their constitutional rights had been violated.

If the case is appealed and reaches the Supreme Court, a real possibility 
according to the Institute for Justice, the public interest law firm 
representing the monks, a suit waged on behalf of folks who hold all their 
possessions in common may rank among the most consequential economic freedom 
cases in a generation, and determine how far states and localities can go to 
regulate entrepreneurs in their jurisdictions.

< - big snip - >

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/07/how-38-monks-took-on-the-funeral-cartel-and-won/242336/
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