Bellows v. Courter

Dwight, J,

The action was by the superintendent of the poor of the county of Seneca against the overseer of the poor of the town of Macedón, in Wayne county, to recover the expenses incurred by the former county in furnishing temporary relief to the family of one H. E., then and for nearly a year before that time resident in the town of Tyre, in Seneca county. H. E. came from Macedón, where he had lived two years, during which time, and while in Tyre, until bis application for the relief above mentioned, he had always supported himself and his family by bis labor. At the time of that application his wife had just died, after giving birth to twin boys. He had no accumulated property, and found himself without means to bury his wife and provide for the immediate wants of his six children, the eldest of whom was twelve years of age. The plaintiff, as superintendent of the poor of Seneca county, having furnished the needed temporary assistance, served upon the predecessor in office of the defendant, as overseer of the poor of Macedón, a notice in which he described H. E. and his children as seven paupers, who had come or strayed, or been improperly sent or brought, from the town of Macedón, in Wayne county, into the county of Seneca, without legal authority or right, with the effect and intent to make the county of Seneca chargeable with their support. And he notified the defendant’s predecessor forthwith-to take charge of such paupers, and remove them to his town and county, and pay the expense of such notice and of the support of said paupers. The defendant’s predecessor responded by denying “the supposed improper removal of II. E. and his six infant children, in the manner and with the intent alleged i.n said notice, ” and the plaintiff thereupon brought this action, alleging in his complaint that H. E. was a pauper when he “came or strayed, or was improperly brought, ” from Macedón to Tyre. The fault of the plaintiff’s -case, as made on the trial, was that the last-mentioned allegation was not only not established, but was admitted to be false. When H. E. removed from Macedón he was not a pauper, and never had been. He ivas a self-supporting citizen of Wayne county, with as good a right to select his residence, *74and remove from one county to another, as any other citizen of the state. The attempt to charge the expense of the relief of his family in Seneca county upon the town of Macedón, including the bringing .of this action, was in supposed compliance with the provision of sections 58-62, tit. 1, c. 20, pt. 1, of the Revised Statutes, (1 Rev. St. 628, 629,) as amended by chapter'546, Laws 1885. For a better understanding of the scope and application of those provisions, it may be useful to glance at some of the earlier provisions of the same title, which, as enacted in the Revised Statutes, was apparently intended to-contain a complete scheme for the care and relief of the poor of the state. Section 24 (1 Rev. St. 620) provides for the determination by the board of supervisors of any county to abolish the distinction between town and county poor in such county. Section 28 provides that in all the counties in which such distinction is not abolished “the poor having a settlement in any town in such county shall be supported at the expense of such town, and the poor not having such settlement shall be supported by the county in which they may be.” Section 29 provides that residence in any town for one year shall constitute a settlement in such town. Section 31 reads as follows: “RTo person shall be removed as a pauper from any city or town to any other city or town of the same or any other county, nor from any county to any other county, but every poor person shall be supported in the "town or county where he may be, as follows: (1) If he had gained a settlement in any town in such county, he shall be maintained by such town. (2) If he hath not gained a settlement in the county in which he shall become poor, sick, or infirm, he shall be supported and relieved by the superintendents of the poor, at the expense of the county. (3) If such person be in a county where the distinction between town and county poor is abolished, he shall in like manner be supported at the expense of the county, and in both the cases aforesaid proceedings for Ills relief shall be had as hereinafter directed. (4) If such pauper be in a county where tire respective towns are liable to support their poor, and bath gained a settlement in some other town of the same county than that in which he may then be, he shall be supported at the expense of the town where-he may be, and the overseer shall give notice in writing to the overseers of the-town to which such pauper shall belong, * * * requiring them to provide for the relief and support of such pauper.” The two following sections provide for the case of a controversy between the towns mentioned above, as to the fact of settlement, and constitute the superintendents of the poor of the county a tribunal to hear and determine such controversy, whose decision shall be final and conclusive. And section 34 gives to the" board of supervisors of the county power to levy a tax on the town against which the adjudication is made, to pay the expenses incurred by the town which has supported the pauper properly chargeable to the former.

Two things are made entirely clear by the provisions of the statute so far quoted: First, that the question of the settlement of any poor person or pauper is to be considered, in determining the question of liability for his support, only as between two towns of the same county which are liable for the support of their own poor, or as between such a town and the county to-which it belongs; and, second, that every poor person who has not a settlement in some town of the county in which he becomes poor must be supported or relieved at the expense of that county; and we shall see that these-rules are not changed by subsequent provisions of the statute, even as amended by modern and short-lived legislation. Section 58 of the same title (1 Rev. St. 628) defines a misdemeanor. It consists of transporting, removing, or enticing to remove, any poor person from any city, town, or county to any other city, town, or county, without legal authority, and there leaving such poor person, with intent to make the city, town, or county to which he is so removed chargeable with the support of such pauper. The section also imposes a penalty for such act, to be recovered by the overseers of the poor of the to wd, *75or the superintendents of the poor of the county, to which the pauper shall be so removed. An essential element of the offense so defined is the criminal intent to subject a city, town, or county, not legally chargeable therewith, to the expense of the support of a pauper. In the Revised Statutes these criminal and penal provisions were supplemented by the provisions of the four succeeding sections, (sections 60-63,) the purpose of which was to secure the return of the pauper to, and his support by, the town or county from which lie had been so improperly removed or enticed, together with indemnity to the county to which he had been removed for its expenses incurred in his support while he remained therein, and in its proceedings to compel his return and future support. These proceedings included a prescribed notice to the proper superintendents or overseers, and, in default of the required action on their part, an action at law to enforce the liability imposed by the statute. Sucli was the consistent and laudable scheme of the Revised Statutes to prevent or give redress for fraud by one political division of the state upon another, and so the statute continued to be until 1885, when, by chapter 546 of the laws of that year, an attempt was made to apply the provisions of section 59, and the subsequent sections cited above, to the case of paupers removing of their own accord from one city, town, or county to another. In such ease the element of criminal or fraudulent intent was not required to exist. It was only necessary that a pauper, or person receiving public charity, in one city, town, or county, should of his own accord, and, presumably, in the hope of bettering his condition, remove to another city, town, or county of the state, to subject the political division from which he removed to the same liability as if he had been removed, or enticed to remove, under circumstances which would have made the act a misdemeanor on the part of the person or persons engaged in it. It was under the statute as thus amended that this action was brought. The amendment was, happily, repealed by chapter 486 of the Laws of 1888. It may be very doubtful whether the repeal of the statute which gave the supposed remedy by action in this case did not put an end to all actions based upon its provisions, and not yet prosecuted to judgment. See Butler v. Palmer, 1 Hill, 324; Board of Health v. Rochester, N. Y. Supp. 725. But it is not necessary to consider that question here. The amended statute did not cover the case, for the reason suggested in the outset of this opinion, and which was the ground upon which the judge at the circuit granted the nonsuit, viz., that H. E. was not a pauper when, in the exercise of the commonest right of a citizen, he removed from the county of Wayne to the county of Seneca. The language of the statute (section 59) as amended, is: “Any pauper so removed, brought, or enticed, or who shall of his own accord come or stray from any city, town, or county, into any other city, town, or county, not legally chargeable with his support, shall be,” etc. This language, consistently with the whole tenor and evident purpose of the statute, shows that the person so removed or removing must be a pauper at the time of his removal to the county in whose behalf the proceeding is taken. We are clearly of the opinion that the nonsuit was properly granted, and that the motion for a new trial must be denied. All concur. Motion for new trial denied, and judgment ordered for the defendant, dismissing the complaint.