The only question in the case is, whether the town of Stanford, in Washington, is chargeable with the maintenance of John Huddlestone, who became a pauper on the 18th of December, 1806 ? To determine this, it is necessary to inquire which of the towns is the last place of his legal settlement.
The town of Washington was divided in 1793, and that part of it which is now the town of Stanford., was erected into a separate town. The pauper was born in the territory now composing the present town of Washington, but at the time when the town of Washington was divided, under the act for the dividing the town of Washington, he resided m the territory which now composes the town of Stanford1
When a new town is erected, it immediately becomes entitled to all the benefits and advantages, and subject to all the duties and burthens common to other towns*) Among the latter is the burthen of maintaining the poor. The provisions of the general law for the maintenance and relief of the poor attach on the new tov/n, the moment it is erected. This being granted, it seems to me to put an end to the question now under consideration.
That birth gives a settlement is not to be disputed, as a general rule ; indeed this is assumed as a fixed principle by our statute. Huddlestone, who became s. pauper in 1806.. was chargeable therefore to the town in which he was born, which is the present town of Washington, unless he has obtained a legal settlement elsewhere.
It is not pretended that he has gained such settlement, unless his residence within the bounds of the present town of Stanford, at the time of the passing of the act to divide the town of Washington in 1793, has had that effect. The act provides, that after a division of the poor, each town shall maintain its own poor, that is, after the division, *196these towns, in relation to the support of the poor as these towns, in relation to the support of the poor as regulated and defined by the general poor laws, shall stand on the same footing as other towns.
troduce a new rule, in relation to the settlement of paupers, it would have been declared in express terms, afid not have been left tó mere implication* It cannot be supposed that the legislature intended to in-as between these towns. If such had been their intention,
There is another view of this question which appears to be conclusive* Suppose the pauper in 1806, had recessary to remove him from thence to. the town in which he had acquired a legal settlement, I think there can be no doubt, that the town of Washington would be considered as the town to which he was chargeable. In the case just supposed; the provisions of the general poor law certainly" would have prevailed* If the construction given to the áct of 1?93 by the appellants’ counsel, be correct, it would follow that, as between the towns of Stanford and Washington, there would be one rule regulating the settlement of paupers, but as between them and third towns there would be another and a different rule. In the first case, the residence of the party woúld determine the settlement; and in the other it would be determined by the birth. I am persuaded that this was never the intention of the legislature. The construction I have adopted will establish one general rule, in the operation of which there is nothing unequal of unjust. sided in the town of Poughkeepsie, and it had been ne-
The evidence offered respecting the agreement between the supervisors and overseers of the poor of the towns of Washington and Stanford was properly rejected by the sessions, That agreement, if made, Was not obligatory, and can never controul the operation, or construction of a statute.
I am of opinion, therefore, that the order of sessions be ■ affirmed.
Spencer, J. The town of Washington, prior to 1793, composed the present towns of Washington <md Stanford.*197By an act of the 12th of March, in that year, the latter was erected into a new town ; the act dividing it, prescribed a method of equalising the poor of the original town, and it declared that thereafter the towns should maintain their respective poor. John Huddlestone, the pauper, was born in Washington prior to its division, and in that part of it which composes the present town of Washington, but at the time of the division, he resided in the present town of Stanford, and has generally since resided there, but was not chargeable, nor likely to become so. Under these circumstances, which of the towns is bound to support him and his wife and children ?
In my opinion the town of Washington is bound to support them as paupers chargeable on that town. After the separation of the town of Washington, and the division of the poor according to the act of 1793, with respect to all future paupers, they stood in the same situation in respect to each other, as any other towns in the state, and as though they had always been distinct towns ; the requisition of the statute, that after the division of the paupers, the towns should maintain their respective poor, never attached on Stanford, because Huddlestone had gained no settlement there, but it did attach on Washington in consequence of the birth of Huddlestone. within its bounds. Birth is not one of the means mentioned in the statute of acquiring a settlement, but the statute presupposes, that it gave settlement, and it has accordingly been holden that the town where a pauper is born is chargeable with his maintenance., until he acquires some other settlement.
The sessions very properly overruled the eyidence of declarations made, when the poor were distributed; the supervisors and overseers of the poor had no authority to make any agreement relative to future paupers; and it would be extraordinary to receive it as evidence of their sense of the law.
In my opinion, the order of the sessions must be affirmed with costs.
*198Kent, Ch. J.Upon the division of a town, the poor are directed to be apportioned, not according to the place of birth, (for they might all happen to have been born in one division of the town,) but according to the last tax list. This was the case with the towns in question, and if Huddlestone, the principal pauper here, had been at that time a pauper, the place of his birth would have been immaterial as it respected the apportionment of the poor. The more reasonable construction of the law appears then to be, that each town took the responsibility of the maintenance of the inhabitants who fell within its new limits. Actual residence became equivalent to birth, in respect to the settlement of the inhabitants of these towns in relation to each other. The actual spot of the birth formed no rule of apportionment of the existing poor, and why should it, as to any of the then existing inhabitants ? In the western and northern parts of the state, one part of a town may have been settled, principally, by emigrations from another part, and by the rule adopted in the court below, upon the separation of the new settlements into a distinct town, all their accruing paupers for many years would be returned upon the old town. The principle adopted by the act, which was not to regard the place of birth in the first distribution of the poor, ought to be carried throughout, and each town should be precluded from recurring back to the place of birth, in the case of actual residents at the time of separation. For these reasons, I am of opinion, that the order below ought to be reversed,
Yates, J. not having heard the argument in the cause, gave no opinion.
Order affirmed.