Oxnard CA Funeral Homes

Oxnard CA funeral homes provide local funeral services. Find more information about Conrad Carroll Funeral Home , Conroy's Flowers by clicking on each funeral home listing. Send funeral flower arrangements to any Oxnard funeral home delivered by our trusted local florist.

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Conrad Carroll Funeral Home

401 West Channel Islands Boulevard
Oxnard, CA 93033
(805) 487-4911
Conrad Carroll Funeral Home funeral flowers

Conroy's Flowers

1117 S Oxnard Blvd
Oxnard, CA 93030
(805) 486-6311
Conroy's Flowers funeral flowers

Funeraria Garcia Mortuary

629 South A Street
Oxnard, CA 93030
(805) 486-9148
Funeraria Garcia Mortuary funeral flowers

Oxnard CA Obituaries and Death Notices

LA Archdiocese, funeral home operator settle lawsuit over lease of cemeteries - LA Daily News

Monday, December 12, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract.Advertisement“We believe our consent was required for a change in control,” Alexander said previously. “This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties.”S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change.“The archdiocese’s claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese’s permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease’s financial terms,” its suit alleged.

JC Oberst: Important week for nation and veterans - Ventura County Star

Monday, November 07, 2016

Veterans Day Ceremony at the Rancho Tapo Veterans Park, 3700 Avenida Simi, Simi Valley, hosted by VFW Post 10049. For more information call 285-8844.Friday: 11 a.m. Veterans Day celebration at Oxnard Plaza Park on the corners of 5th & C streets hosted by the American Legion Post 48. Call 604-4800 for more information.Friday: 11 a.m. Veterans Day celebration at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum,...

LA Archdiocese, funeral home operator settle lawsuit over lease of cemeteries - The Daily Breeze

Monday, September 12, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract.Advertisement“We believe our consent was required for a change in control,” Alexander said previously. “This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties.”S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change.“The archdiocese’s claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese’s permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease’s financial terms,” its suit alleged.

Archdiocese of Los Angeles Settles Suit with Funeral Home over Cemetery Lease - Patch.com

Monday, September 05, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract."We believe our consent was required for a change in control," Alexander said previously. "This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties."S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change."The archdiocese's claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese's permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease's financial terms," its suit alleged.— City News Service, photo via Shutterstock Get free real-time news alerts from the Culver City Patch.

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LA Archdiocese, funeral home operator settle lawsuit over lease of cemeteries - LA Daily News

Monday, December 12, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract.Advertisement“We believe our consent was required for a change in control,” Alexander said previously. “This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties.”S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change.“The archdiocese’s claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese’s permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease’s financial terms,” its suit alleged.

JC Oberst: Important week for nation and veterans - Ventura County Star

Monday, November 07, 2016

Veterans Day Ceremony at the Rancho Tapo Veterans Park, 3700 Avenida Simi, Simi Valley, hosted by VFW Post 10049. For more information call 285-8844.Friday: 11 a.m. Veterans Day celebration at Oxnard Plaza Park on the corners of 5th & C streets hosted by the American Legion Post 48. Call 604-4800 for more information.Friday: 11 a.m. Veterans Day celebration at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum,...

LA Archdiocese, funeral home operator settle lawsuit over lease of cemeteries - The Daily Breeze

Monday, September 12, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract.Advertisement“We believe our consent was required for a change in control,” Alexander said previously. “This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties.”S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change.“The archdiocese’s claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese’s permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease’s financial terms,” its suit alleged.

Archdiocese of Los Angeles Settles Suit with Funeral Home over Cemetery Lease - Patch.com

Monday, September 05, 2016

Catholic Cemetery in East Los Angeles, Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Rowland Heights, San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills and Santa Clara Cemetery in Oxnard.In September 1997, the archdiocese and S.E. Funeral Homes agreed to let the plaintiffs lease land for 40 years to operate chapels and funeral homes at the six cemeteries from January 1998 until December 2038, the S.E. Funeral Homes suit states.In September 2014, the archdiocese notified the funeral home company that it was breaking the leases with the reverse merger transaction, according to the S.E. Funeral Homes complaint. Archdiocese attorney Stephen Alexander said previously that the plaintiffs, not his clients, breached the contract."We believe our consent was required for a change in control," Alexander said previously. "This was a very specific written contract negotiated by the parties."S.E. Funeral Homes maintained that no such consent was needed if there was an ownership change."The archdiocese's claim that (S.E. Funeral Homes) needed the archdiocese's permission is ridiculous, a fiction much like one a greedy landlord designs to cast out a good tenant in order to raise the rent or to put pressure on a lucrative business deal to sweeten the lease's financial terms," its suit alleged.— City News Service, photo via Shutterstock Get free real-time news alerts from the Culver City Patch.