|
The registration of the death is the formal record
of the death. It is done by the Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages.
Click here
for details of the offices in Worthing and the nearby area.
When someone dies at home, the
death should be registered at the register office for the district where
they lived. If the death took place in hospital or in a nursing home it
must be registered at the register office for the district in which the
hospital or home is situated. In England and Wales, if it is convenient,
you can go to a different office to register the death and the details
will be passed on to the correct office. You should check the opening
hours of the office you wish to go to. Some offices have an appointments
only system.
A death should be registered
within five days but registration can be delayed for another nine days if
the registrar is told that a medical certificate has been issued. If the
death has been reported to the coroner you cannot register it until the
coroner's investigations are finished.
It is a criminal offence not
to register a death.
The death should be registered
by one of the following (in order of priority)
- a relative who was
present at the death
- a relative present
during the person's last illness
- a relative living in the
district where the death took place
- anyone else present at
the death
- an owner or occupier of
the building where the death took place and who was aware of the death
- the person arranging the
funeral (but not the funeral director).
You cannot delegate
responsibility for registering the death to anyone else.
You must take with you the
medical certificate of death, since the death cannot be registered until
the registrar has seen this. If possible, you should also take the
person's NHS medical card and birth and marriage certificates. The
registrar will want from you the following information:-
- date and place of death
- the full name of the
person (including maiden name) and their last address
- the person's date and
place of birth
- the person's occupation
and, in the case of a woman who was married or widowed, full name and
occupation of her husband
- if the person was still
married, the date of birth of their husband or wife
- whether the person was
receiving a pension or other social security benefits.
Any questions? Please call Ian on 01903
206299
Forms
When you have registered the
death, the registrar will give you a green certificate (for which there is
no charge) to give to us. This allows either burial or cremation to go
ahead. Occasionally a registrar may be able to issue a certificate for
burial only (but never cremation) where no one has yet been able to
register the death.
The registrar will also give
you a form to send to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) (In
Northern Ireland the Social Security Agency). This allows them to deal
with the person's pension and other benefits.
Death
certificate
The death certificate is a
copy of the entry made by the registrar in the death register. This
certificate is needed to deal with money or property left by the person
who has died, including dealing with the will. You may need several copies
of the certificate, for which there will be a charge.
Coroner
A coroner is a doctor or
lawyer appointed by a local authority to investigate certain deaths. In
Northern Ireland, the Lord Chancellor appoints a coroner. A coroner is
completely independent of the authority and has a separate office and
staff. You will find the address of your local coroner's office in the
telephone directory.
A coroner can investigate a
death if the body is in their district, even though the death took place
somewhere else, for example, abroad.
A death must always be
reported to a coroner in the following situations:-
- the person's doctor had
not seen them in the 14 days before they died or immediately afterwards
(28 days in Northern Ireland)
- a doctor had not looked
after, seen or treated the person during their last illness (in other
words, death was sudden)
- the cause of death is
unknown or uncertain
- the death was violent or
unnatural (for example, suicide, accident or drug or alcohol overdose)
- the death was in any way
suspicious
- the death took place
during surgery or recovery from an anaesthetic
- the death took place in
prison or police custody
- the death was caused by
an industrial disease.
Anyone who is unhappy about
the cause of a death can inform a coroner about it, but in most cases a
death will be reported to a coroner by a doctor or the police.
In some cases the coroner will
need to order a post-mortem, in which case the body will be taken to
hospital for this to be carried out. You do not have the right to object
to a post-mortem ordered by the coroner, but should tell the coroner if
you have religious or other strong objections. In cases where a death is
reported to a coroner because the person had not seen a doctor in the
previous 14 days (28 in Northern Ireland) the coroner will consult with
the person's GP and will usually not need to order a post-mortem.
A death cannot be registered
until the coroner's investigations are complete and a certificate has been
issued allowing registration to take place. This means that the funeral
will usually also be delayed. Where a post-mortem has taken place the
coroner must give permission for cremation.
Inquests
An inquest is a legal inquiry
into a death. It is held in public (sometimes with a jury) by a coroner in
cases where the death was violent or unnatural or took place in prison or
police custody or where the cause of death is still uncertain after a
post-mortem or, in Northern Ireland, where a child has died in care. Only
a coroner can order an inquest and relatives have no right to insist on
one.
An inquest may take place into
a death which took place abroad if the body has been returned to the UK.
Relatives may attend an
inquest and ask questions of witnesses. They may ask a lawyer to represent
them but there is no legal aid available for this. In Northern Ireland
legal aid is not available for inquests but some pre-inquest advice may be
available under the green form scheme. In England and Wales, an
organisation called INQUEST may sometimes be able to arrange legal
representation, either free or for a reduced charge. The address of
INQUEST is:-
89-93 Fonthill Road
London N4 3JH
Tel: 020 7263 1111
Fax: 020 7561 0799
E-mail:
inquest@inquest.org.uk
Website:
www.inquest.org.uk
The inquest should provide
more information about how and why the death took place and whether anyone
else was responsible. In some cases, a criminal prosecution may later take
place.
Once the inquest has been held
the death can be registered and the funeral can take place (although in
some cases the coroner may allow the funeral to go ahead before the
inquest is over). |