Gourley v. Allen

Colden, Senator, (after stating the facts.)

When this case was opened at our bar, few of us, I believe, considered it of any very great importance. Nor is it so, as to the amount which was originally in question. But it is a case which concerns the poor. It is therefore of great interest. It also regards the liability of public officers, who take upon themselves, almost gratuitously, very benevolent and onerous duties. On these accounts, it is no less deserving care*647ful examination, and attentive consideration, than any other case.

Defendants in error not employed by the plaintiffs, nor did they promise to pay General ground of implied promises. English cases upon the point in question These no guide, owing to difference of statutes.

As the defendants in error were not employed by the plaintiffs, and as they made no express promise to pay for the services which were rendered to the pauper; if they are liable, it must be in virtue of an implied promise.

The only foundation on which an implied promise can be raised, is a legal obligation to perform that which is presumed to have been promised. (3 B. & P. 250, note a.) An implied promise is the quasi contractus of the civil law, which allowed it to be presumed that a party had contracted to perform that which the law exacted of him. (Poth. on Ob. pt. 4, ch. 1, s. 2.) If the overseers were, by law, bound to pay for the services which were rendered to the pauper, then the judgment in favor of the defendants in error ought to be maintained.

Were the overseers of the poor, with us, precisely in the place of parish officers in England, we should have no difficulty in deciding this case, if we choose to abide by English authority.

The cases of Simmons v. Wilmot and others, church wardens and overseers of the poor of Isleworth, (3 Esp. Rep. 91,) of Watson v. Turner, (Bull. N. P. 147,) and of Wennall v. Adney, (3 B. & P. 247, 253,) very conclusively establish, that the church wardens and overseers of the poor would, in England, be liable in a case like that we are now considering. In the last case, Lord Alvanley, Chief Justice, says, “ I have no doubt whatever, that parish officers are bound to assist where such accidents as these take place ; and that the law will so far raise an implied contract against them, as to enable any person who affords that immediate assistance which the necessity of the case usually requires, to recover against them.”

But we cannot take English authorities for our guide in this case ; because the office and duties of our overseers of the poor are very different from the office and duties of the parish officers of England.

The former, as well as the latter, are created by, and derive all their powers and authority from statute. It is only *648to compare our own law with the act of' parliament, to see that the powers and obligations of the English parish officers, and our overseers of the poor, are not alike.

English acts By our acts. Our overseers can make no appropriation without order #f a justice.

The English parish officers are appointed pursuant to the statute of the 43 Eliz. ch. 2 ; and their powers and duties are prescribed by the same statute. They are, from time to time, to raise, weekly or otherwise, in their respective parishes, competent sums to relieve the old, blind, lame and indigent; and they, independently of any other authority, may apply, according to their own discretion, the relief which may appear to them to be requisite; so that whatever sums they may rightfully pay or expend, they can always, as is said in Tawney v. Case, (Ld. Raym. 1013, 2 Salk. 531,) re-imburse themselves by “ making a rate” on the parishioners. They can never, therefore, allege a want of power or means to afford the required relief. The law may, consequently, well raise an implied promise against them, in favor of one who shall have supplied the relief a pauper required and which the church wardens and overseers neglected or refused to afford.

But our overseers are in a very different situation. Our statute has not authorized them to levy money; nor trusted to their discretion to apply any part of that which is raised in the respective towns.

By our act, (1 R. L. 287, s. 23,) the sum requisite for maintaining the poor, is to be determined by the inhabitants in town meeting; and is to be raised in each town by the authority of the supervisors of the county.

The overseers can make no appropriation for the relief of a pauper, without an order of a justice of the peace, made in writing; and “ the overseer is to make no other, or further allowance than what by the order shall be directed.” (id. 287-8, s. 25.)

So cautious has ourlegislature been, to prevent overseers from exercising a discretion in relieving paupers, that our act (id. 289, s. 28,) provides, “ that if any overseer shall relieve any poor person without such order, he shall forfeit and lose all such money and goods paid and distributed te *649such poor person; nor shall any allowance he made to him for the same, in passing his accounts.”

Of English casual paupers. Provision for. New York casual paupers ; ami provision for. Our cases on this head.

There is a provision in the English law, frequently referred to in the reports, (3 W. & M. ch. 11, s. 11, and 9 Geo. 1, ch. 7, s. 1, 2,) for what are commonly called casual poor ; that is, paupers who are taken sick, or meet with an accident, and are not on the collection hooks of the overseers. These a justice may make an order to relieve, where the overseers refuse or neglect to do it.

Our statute, (1 R. L. 284, 285-6, s. 16 & 25,) makes provision for the same objects; but however urgent a case may be, the overseers can afford no relief from the public purse, without an order from a justice of the peace.

In all the eases which have heretofore been decided by the Supreme Court on this subject, these limitations of the powers of overseers of the poor have been recognized.

In the case of Adams v. Supervisors of Columbia, (8 John. 323, 326,) the Court decided that, after justices had made an order for the relief of a casual pauper, the overseers were liable to the physician who had attended him, for the sum which the order directed to be paid.

In Everts v. Adams, (12 John 352,) two justices made an order that a pauper should be furnished with medical aid, to be administered by Doctor Malcom. The defendant in error, Adams, attended, but it was not proved that he did so at the request of the overseers of the poor. The Court say, that if the overseers had paid Adams, it would have been directly in face of the order, which was, that Malcom should be employed; and they question, whether the overseers would have been allowed a payment to Adams, in passing their account. And the Court decided expressly that the overseers were not liable; because they had, in no way, sanctioned Adams’ demand, or engaged to pay it; and had not in any manner employed him to perform the service. “ There is no obligation,” says the Court, “ to pay, unless it be implied by law; and the law will create no such liability ; especially as it would be directly in the face of the order.” A fortiori, there can be no liability where there is no order.

Conclusion from them. Had the plaintiff in error paid the defendants, this must have been out of the pockets of the former.

Ill the case of Hull v. The Supervisors of Oneida, (19 John. 256,) Platt, J., in delivering the opinion of the Court, says, “ The extraordinary expenses of a surgical operation cannot be legally imposed on the public, (although proper and necessary,) without an express previous order of the justice, on the application of the overseers ; or, at least, a subsequent ratification and sanction by the justices and overseers.” And he says, (as must be said in the case we are now deciding,) “ Here was no such previous order, nor any subsequent adoption of the claim. We are, therefore, constrained to say, that in rendering the service, the relator,” (i. e. the physician) must be deemed to have acted gratuitously; or to have relied upon individual responsibility for his reward.”

Now if the overseers had not funds at their disposal for the relief of the pauper; if they could give him no relief without an order of a justice : how can we say that they were undef a legal obligation to pay the defendants in error 7

Possibly no justice in the county would give the order required by law, under a belief that the child, after he had been illegally and barbarously vendued, as it is called, and after Rotch had been paid for maintaining him, was not entitled to relief.

If the plaintiffs in error had paid the doctors, they must have done it out oí their own pockets. This, I am persuaded, they were under no legal obligation to do ; and therefore the law raises no implied promise against them.

If the question were, what the law ought to be, humanity would seem to plead powerfully in favor of a provision for immediate relief in a case like that which we are now considering. The question, however, is not, what the law ought-to be, but what it is. The legislature may have thought that doctors had as much benevolence as the rest of their species : and that no human being would stop to inquire, how he was to be paid, before he rendered the first assistance which such a casualty might require. It might have been considered, that the sympathies of our nature would af • .ford all the succor that could be necessary, in a case of emergency, till more permanent relief might be obtained, with the precautions which the law has thought proper to pre*651¿cribe. But whatever may have been the motives of the legislature, it appears to me, that it has not entrusted to overseers of the poor, power to dispose of the public funds for he relief of paupers in any case; and I do not think they ; an be made to give such relief at their own expense; which would be the effect of suffering the defendants in error to retain the judgment which has been rendered in their favor in the court below. For it is to be recollected, that if that judgment is maintained an execution may be issued for the sum recovered, and the costs against the defendants below. And when the amount has been levied by a sale of their property, how are» they to be repaid ? The law has made no provision by which they can compel a re-imbursement. It is not with them as it is with the. parish officers in England. They, under such circumstances, would indemnify themselves by a competent rate on the parishoners. (Tawney’s case, 2 Salk 531.)

Overseers have no power to dispose oí the public funds in anjease. The defendants below have no means to compel t reimbursemejf

We are unfortunate in not having the reasons which the Supieme Court assigned, upon giving their judgment in favor of the defendants in error. For want of these, I have referred to their decisions in former cases ; and I acknowledge, that I find myself incapable of reconciling them with Shat now before us, which I think ought to he reversed.

I have considered this case, as if the defendants below had been the overseers of the poor at the time the services were rendered. They were not so. Therefore, though the former overseers were liable, another question would be whether that liability was transferred to the plaintiffs in error, who were not in office till at a subsequent period. But if the original overseers were not responsible certainly their successors could not be. In my view of the case, therefore, it is unnecessary to give any opinion on this last point.

I am in favor of reversing the judgment of the Supreme Court.