Texas mom says son’s body left to ‘literally rot’ by funeral home

A Texas mother is suing a funeral home for $1 million after she claims the facility left her son’s body to “literally rot,” causing an unbearable smell that made loved ones vomit during the funeral, according to a lawsuit obtained by The Post.

Integrity Funeral Home at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Houston was hired to embalm and bury Edward Silva, 43, after his sudden death in 2021, according to the legal claim filed by his mother, Julieta Guerra.

Silva was scheduled to be embalmed on Feb. 12, but when his mother was finally able to view the body on Feb. 23, she claims it was in a shockingly decomposed state, just hours ahead of his funeral.


An image of Edward Silva's body in a casket was included in the lawsuit filed by his mother against a Houston funeral home.
An image of Edward Silva’s body in a casket was included in the lawsuit filed by his mother against a Houston funeral home.
Harris County District Court

“The body was badly deteriorated and smelled rotten,” the lawsuit alleging negligence and deceptive trade reads. “Edward had remained cut open and had not been sewn back up. His chest had a gaping hole, an empty cavity that was not stuffed. He did not seem like he had been embalmed. There was a terrible smell.”

The clothing Silva was supposed to wear during his wake didn’t fit because of the “extreme post-mortem swelling of the body” — forcing his parents to cut the clothing open so it could be draped over his body.

Silva’s mother was so distraught when she saw her son’s remains, she allegedly collapsed, saying, “This is not my son,” according to the filing.


Juileta Guerra allegedly collapsed after seeing her son's body.
The lawsuit claims Silva’s body was allowed to “literally rot.”
Harris County District Court

White gloves had to be placed on his hands as bodily fluids were oozing out of the fingers and ears, the lawsuit details.

Silva’s grieving parents were forced to hold a closed casket viewing, instead of an open one, as they had originally planned, due to the smell of decaying flesh. They even went as far as to bring in a heavy-duty odor repellent used by professional cleaners to mask the odor, but it persisted.

“The smell of decomposition was just so distracting,” the suit said. “Everyone kept covering their noses to help them tolerate the smell, and some guests were retching.”


Silva
Silva’s parents were forced to hold a closed-casket viewing.
Harris County District Court

Guerra’s suit doesn’t explain why the funeral home neglected to embalm her son, but claims its staff kept delaying her from seeing him.

Silva’s body arrived at the funeral home on Feb. 11 and was supposed to be embalmed the next day. His mother called the funeral home on Feb. 12, asking to see his body, and says she was denied access.

The funeral for Silva, whose cause of death is not mentioned, was pushed back further as a massive winter storm left most of Texas without power for five days.

On Feb. 14, Guerra alleges, she drove to the mortuary and realized it had no power and didn’t have a backup generator either, factors she believes contributed to the state of her son’s body — which she was only finally able to see on Feb. 23.


Integrity Funeral Home at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Houston and the facility's director are named in the lawsuit.
Integrity Funeral Home at Forest Lawn Cemetery and the facility’s director are named in the lawsuit.
Google Maps

She accuses the funeral home of offering her no apologies for the state of her son and adds she was even asked not to take them to court.

“A few months later, [the funeral home director] made an unsolicited phone call to Julieta saying ‘Please don’t sue the funeral home or they will let people go,’” the lawsuit goes on to allege.

The funeral home did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

Guerra now suffers from depression and has not been able to work due to constant crying and panic attacks, her lawyer said in the suit. She’s asking the court for $1 million in damages.