The Coroner
Her Majesty’s Coroners are judicial officers (usually Solicitors or Doctors) who are quite independent of local or central government. It is their duty to establish the cause of death when a Doctor is unable to issue a death certificate.
This may be because the Doctor had not seen the person within twenty eight days prior to death or the death occurred during an operation or before recovery from the effects of anaesthetic, or the death was sudden and unexplained: or as the result of an accident or under suspicious circumstances. If one of the above circumstances applied, either the Doctor or a Police Officer will contact the Coroner. The Registrar of Deaths also has the power to report to the Coroner.
If none of these has reported the death, but you, as a relative or Executor are suspicious about the cause of death, you may speak to the Coroner yourself. Your Funeral Director will advise you how to contact them. It is usually necessary for the Coroner to order a post mortem examination to establish accurately the cause of death.
The consent of relatives is not needed for this. If the Coroner is satisfied that the death was due to natural causes they will then issue their form to enable the death to be registered.
This will normally be posted direct to the appropriate Registrar. Sometimes if the Doctor feels that the Coroner should know the circumstances of death but does not feel that a post mortem examination is necessary, the Coroner will issue a Certificate called a Part A, registration cannot be done until this has been received by the Registrar, we will advise you of this.
Whilst the funeral arrangements cannot be confirmed until the Coroner has issued their form, you should still contact M. Sillifant & Sons as soon as possible. We will be able to make provisional arrangements and explain the likely time-span before the funeral.