Lawrence Brown was brought to the emergency room of Brandywine Hospital at 5:20 p.m. on October 30, 1984, suffering from a gunshot wound of the left supra orbital region and, within the hour, was determined by a neurosurgeon, James P. Argires, M.D., to be suffering from a terminal head injury. As a result of his diagnosis, Dr. Argires advised the Delaware Valley Transplant Program (DVTP) that Mr. Brown, who was placed on life support systems, was a potential donor of organs for transplantation and, at approximately 7:15 p.m. that evening a tissue typing biopsy was performed. Cerebral death was documented at 10:35 p.m. on October 30, 1984, and the kidneys and heart of the decedent were removed for transplantation during the early morning hours of November 1, 1984. The first relative of the decedent to be located as a result of the search undertaken by state police was the decedent’s sister, Virginia Brown, who was located at her office at 10:15 on the morning of November 1, 1984.
This action was subsequently commenced by appellants: Virginia Brown, the sister of the decedent, in her capacity as an individual as well as administratrix of the estate of Lawrence Brown; Thomas Brown, the father of the decedent; and Joan Spina and Johnnie Lee Brown, the sister and brother of the decedent. Appellants named as defendants in the action the Delaware Valley Transplant Program (hereinafter DVTP); Arthur Harrell, coordinator for DVTP; Brandywine Hospital; *87the president of Brandywine Hospital, Norman Ledwin; the administrator of the Brandywine Hospital, Phillippe Oullette; James Argires, the aforementioned neurosurgeon; the executive director of DVTP, Howard Nathan; the attorney for the Hospital, Samuel Heed; and Charles Wagner, M.D.1, the surgeon who removed the organs for transplantation.
Appellants sought money damages from appellees based upon appellees’ participation in the harvesting of Lawrence Brown’s heart and kidneys. The complaint filed by appellants sets forth causes of action for:
(1) mutilation of a corpse,
(2) intentional infliction of emotional distress,
(3) civil conspiracy, and
(4) assault and battery.2
Following the close of the pleadings, all appellees moved for summary judgment on the basis of the qualified immunity afforded by Section 8607(c) of the Anatomical Gift Act, 20 Pa.C.S. § 8607(c). The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment on the basis of the qualified immunity, and this timely appeal was taken from the judgment entered in favor of all appellees.
Appellants contend that there exist material issues of fact as to whether appellees acted in good faith or whether appellees sought to avoid the provisions of the Act so as to obtain the decedent’s organs without the consent of any of the individuals authorized by Section 8602(b) of the Act to give such consent. Essentially the allegations of appellants’ complaint are based upon appellants’ belief that appellees purposefully circumvented the provisions of the Pennsylvania Anatomical Gift Act, *88thus precluding application of the good faith defense provided by Section 8607(c) of the Act. We find that there is no dispute as to any material fact, that the undisputed evidence of record establishes the good faith of appellees, and that appellees are, as a matter of law, entitled to the qualified immunity provided by the Act. We, therefore, affirm the judgment entered in favor of appellees.
The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act has been adopted, with minor variations, in all fifty states and the District of Columbia. Section 8602(b) of the Pennsylvania Act, which is identical to the Uniform Act, establishes a descending order of priority for those persons with authority to make an anatomical gift:
b) Any of the following persons, in order of priority stated, when persons in prior classes are not available at the time of death, and in the absence of actual notice of contrary indications by the decedent or actual notice of opposition by a member of the same or a prior class, may give all or any part of the decedent’s body for any purpose specified in Section 8603 of this code:
(1) the spouse;
(2) an adult son or daughter;
(3) either parent;
(4) an adult brother or sister;
(5) a guardian of the person of the decedent at the time of his death; and
(6) any other person authorized or under obligation to dispose of the body.
c) The persons authorized by subsection (b) of this section may make the gift after or immediately before death.
20 Pa.C.S. § 8602.
Section 8607(c) of the Act provides that any
person who acts in good faith in accord with the terms of this chapter or with the anatomical gift laws of another state or a foreign country is not liable for damages in any civil *89action or subject to prosecution in any criminal proceeding for his act.
20 Pa.C.S. § 8607(c).
The argument of appellants that appellees were guilty of a purposeful failure to act as well as purposeful non-disclosure is based upon the following facts as recited in appellants’ brief:
“Between 6:00 p.m. and midnight on October 30, 1984, the Pennsylvania state police had obtained a voter registration card, an unemployment card, an address, a post office box, a Social Security number, and a witness’ statement that the person he had seen shot was named ‘Larry’ and determined that such information was a sufficiently accurate and positive identification to formulate the basis for a sworn affidavit that the victim of the shooting was Larry Brown. At this same point in the chronology of events, the Delaware Valley Transplant Program had also obtained information indicating that the shooting victim had been identified as Lawrence Brown by an ‘apparent girlfriend’. It is further undisputed that by 9:15 a.m. the following morning the individual in the hospital had been positively identified by the shooter as Larry Brown, a resident of Frank’s Folly Campground. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the [appellees] maintain even today, more than five years later, that no one in the hospital or the Transplant Program knew the identity of Larry Brown at this same point in time.- Finally, it is absolutely clear, both from deposition testimony as well as the defendants’ summary judgment motion, that at no time on October 30, 1984, did anyone from Brandywine Hospital or the Transplant Program make any attempt of any kind to locate the next of kin of Larry Brown.”
Essentially, counsel for appellants argues that three facts preclude the entry of summary judgment in favor of appellees:
(1) that the state police rather than any of the appellees were the only individuals actively searching for Larry Brown’s next of kin;
(2) that the appellees, aware of the decedent’s tentative identification as Larry Brown, caused all references to *90the decedent in the petition as originally filed to be to “John Doe” instead of “Larry Brown”; and
(3) that counsel for appellees represented to the trial court that there was no authority directly on point which would authorize the trial court to enter an order granting permission to the DVTP to harvest decedent’s heart and kidneys.
We conclude, for reasons hereinafter set forth, that these facts, accepted as true for purposes of ruling upon the entry of summary judgment, do not provide any basis upon which to disturb the ruling of the distinguished Judge Charles B. Smith that appellees were entitled to the good faith immunity provided by the Act.
Appellants contend that the appellees’ reliance upon the efforts of the state police to locate the decedent’s next of kin is evidence of their lack of good faith and their indifference to the requirement that consent be obtained, if possible, from a close relative pursuant to the classifications established by Section 8602(b). We disagree. The qualified immunity provided by Section 8607(c) of the Act requires a “good faith” attempt to comply with all of the statutory requirements for organ donation. The statute does not require any particular type of search for members of higher classes in order to establish the unavailability of members of that class. Section 8607(c) of the Pennsylvania statute was adopted verbatim from Section 7(c) of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, and was designed to simplify, facilitate, and encourage organ donation. As noted in the Comment to Section 7 of the Uniform Act:
the entire Section 7 merits genuinely liberal interpretation to effectuate the purpose and intent of the Uniform Act, that is to encourage and facilitate the important and ever increasing need for human tissue and organs for medical research, education and therapy, including transplantation.
8A Uniform Laws Annotated, § 7.
The difficulty encountered by the State Police in their attempt to expeditiously locate Larry Brown’s relatives was occasioned not by any failure on the part of appellees but rather by reason of the estrangement between Larry Brown *91and his family. The state police came into possession of decedent’s voter registration card and a Social Security card, but neither document contained a photograph or identified members of his family. The state police quickly located Pamela Batson, the decedent’s paramour with whom he had resided for the nine months immediately preceding his death, but Ms. Batson indicated that she believed the decedent’s parents were dead and that the decedent’s two sisters and one brother, whose names she did not know, did not reside in Pennsylvania. Moreover, the personal effects of the decedent, which were located at the home he shared with Ms. Batson, did not include any documents or correspondence containing the names or addresses of any family member.
The deposition testimony of the troopers involved in the search for Larry Brown’s relatives firmly established a good faith effort on their part which culminated in the notification of Virginia Brown, less than forty-eight hours after the decedent was brought to the emergency room, at 10:15 a.m. on the morning of November 1, 1984. The testimony of appellants themselves established that the difficulty encountered by the state police was the result of family estrangement and not lack of diligent police effort:
Appellant Virginia Brown, the sister of the decedent and administratrix of his estate, testified that she had not spoken with her brother in four or five years and did not know where he was living at the time of his death.
Appellant Thomas Brown, the father of the decedent testified that he had not seen his son for at least one year and did not know where he was living at the time of his death. Appellant Joan Brown Spina, another sister of decedent, testified that she had not spoken with the decedent for approximately three years prior to his death and appellee Johnnie Lee Brown testified that he had last seen his brother approximately four years before his death.
Thus, the record establishes that at the time of the decedent’s death on the evening of October 30,1984, none of the individuals authorized by Section 8602(b)(1) through (b)(5) to make a decision concerning organ donation were available, and dem*92onstrates as well that the State Police, acting at the request of the appellees, conducted a diligent, good faith effort to locate the members of the decedent’s family. Nor was there any suggestion, from any source, that the decedent or any of the individuals enumerated in sub-sections (b)(1) through (b)(5) were opposed to organ donation.3 The Act authorizes, in the absence of the individuals specified by Section 8602(b)(1) through (b)(5), “any other person authorized or under obligation to dispose of the body,” to make the decision regarding organ donation. As a result, appellees, pursuant to Section (b)(6) of the Act, proceeded to obtain a court order authorizing the hospital to make the decision regarding organ donation. Appellees unquestionably proceeded in accordance with the intent of the Pennsylvania Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, since the priority scheme established by section 8602(b) was drafted “taking into account the very limited time available following death for the successful removal of such critical tissues as the kidney, the liver and the heart”. 8A Uniform Laws Annotated at p. 35 (1983).
As a result, we conclude that the undisputed facts of record establish, as a matter of law, the good faith of appellees in attempting to locate those individuals specified in subsections (b)(1) through (b)(6) of Section 8602 of the Act. As we pronounce that the good faith of appellees has been established as a matter of law, we echo the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Wayne County, New York, which, while recognizing that the issue of whether an individual has acted in “good faith” is generally a question of fact rendering summary judgment inappropriate, held that
after an extensive review of the reasoning behind these so-called “good faith decisions”, this Court believes that the instant case is distinguishable. In those decisions, the court had to deal with the question of whether a defendant had *93“conformed to a standard of conduct required by law”, and that determination was held to be a question of fact. (Kiernan v. Hendrick, 116 A.D.2d 779, 781, 497 N.Y.S.2d 171, appeal dismissed, 68 N.Y.2d 661, 505 N.Y.S.2d 76, 496 N.E.2d 235). In those cases, most of which involved dealings of a corporate or commercial nature, there was no express or specific criteria of a statutory nature incorporating such a “standard of conduct” against which an individual’s conduct could be measured, without submitting evidence in the form of in-court testimony to a trier of fact.
In the instant case, however, the Court believes that the Legislature has created an objective standard by which the good faith of a donee could be measured. The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act establishes a statutory scheme which outlines the means of effecting an anatomical gift, the classes of individuals entitled to effect such a gift, and the circumstances under which such a gift must be deemed null and void. None of the previous good-faith cases have involved such a definitive standard by which to judge a defendant’s conduct.
Nicoletta v. Rochester Eye and Human Parts Bank, Inc., 136 Misc.2d 1065, 1068-69, 519 N.Y.S.2d 928, 931 (1987).
Appellants also contend that two specific facts related to the court proceedings create a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment:
First, that the emergency petition submitted to the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County identified the decedent as “John Doe” when the hospital and the state police were by then reasonably certain that the decedent’s name was Larry Brown; and
Second, that counsel for the Hospital, Attorney Heed, in response to an inquiry from the Court as to the existence of a specific statute authorizing the court to direct the harvesting of the decedent’s organs for transplantation, responded that he was not aware of “specific authority that will allow you to do that, but I would certainly think you would have the general power to do that”.
*94There is no merit to either contention, for neither the designation of the decedent as “John Doe” on the petition, nor the statement that counsel was unaware of specific authority for the entry of the requested order creates an issue of fact as to whether appellees made a good faith attempt to comply with the provisions of the Pennsylvania Uniform Anatomical Gift Act.
Counsel for the Hospital stated to the court that he had caused the petition to be drafted identifying the decedent as “John Doe, Caucasian male, age 28” as a result of counsel’s lack of knowledge that the decedent had, by that time, been tentatively identified as Lawrence Brown. Appellee Norman Ledwin, who was present for the hearing, advised the court that the police had identified the decedent as Larry Brown, that his girlfriend had been located, that no relatives had been found yet, and that the hospital sought to secure the permission of the court since the decedent’s girlfriend was not an individual who could make a decision regarding organ donation.4
*95The court, as a result of the exchange with Attorney Heed and Appellee Ledwin, amended the petition and order to reflect the decedent’s name as Lawrence Brown. Appellants have not produced any evidence from any source that appellees had purposely sought to conceal the decedent’s name from the court. Nor can such an inference be drawn under the circumstances of this case since no positive identification of the decedent had yet been made, no photographic identification had been recovered, and no medical or dental records of the decedent had been obtained. Thus, while the state police *96and hospital personnel believed that the decedent was Lawrence Brown, their identification remained tentative.
Nor may a court draw the inference desired by appellants from counsel’s statement to the court that he was unaware of “specific authority” authorizing the court to order the harvesting and transplantation of the decedent’s organs due to the exigency of the situation and the inability of the state police to locate any relatives. We simply find unacceptable the argument of appellants, that counsel’s failure to cite, in response to the court’s inquiry, the Pennsylvania Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 8602, is evidence of bad faith.
The Act, in fact, does not specifically authorize a court to enter an order granting the hospital the right to donate an individual’s organs where none of the relatives designated in Section 8602(b) can be located at the time of death. Moreover, our research does not disclose that any appellate forum, in any of the jurisdictions which have adopted the Uniform Act, has addressed the use of a court order in lieu of consent by any of the individuals designated in the Act. While counsel could certainly have persuasively argued that a court order authorizing the hospital to harvest the decedent’s organs was impliedly authorized by Section 8602(b)(6), counsel’s failure to so assert cannot, under any stretch of the imagination, be considered evidence of bad faith. As the learned trial court observed, appellees “complied with the requirements of the Act, and in fact, went beyond that which was required of them by seeking a court order granting its consent”.
We agree and even observe that it was not the actions of appellees which inspired, during our study of this appeal, a sense of a diminished presence of good faith. In any event, we conclude that the trial court properly granted the motions of appellees for summary judgment.
Order affirmed.
JOHNSON, J., files dissenting opinion.