37 Neb. 283 | Neb. | 1893
The defendant in error, as plaintiff in the district court of Douglas county, filed its petition against the plaintiff in error, as defendant, on the 23d day of July, 1889, containing, in addition to proper allegations of its own corporate existence, the following material averments: That on May 26, 1876, and ever since, the defendant was, and has been, the husband of'Mary M. Baldwin and legally liable for her support and maintenance; that on said last named date Mary M. Baldwin, having a legal settlement in said Douglas county, Nebraska, and being adjudged insane by the board of commissioners of insanity of said county, was •committed to the Nebraska state insane asylum, and that ever since said date she has been insane and continued an inmate of said , asylum at the cost and expense of said Douglas county; that said county has been compelled to
' The defendant demurred to this petition on the ground that it did not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This demurrer was overruled and defendant duly excepted. Afterward there was filed an answer, by which was admitted the truth of the allegations that Mary M.,Baldwin was the wife of the defendant, and that she wás'insane. Every other allegation of the petition wás denied by this answer. Defendant also pleaded the statute of limitations as against plaintiff’s claim. By reply, plaintiff denied each allegation in the defendant’s answer.
On the 12th day of November, 1890, a trial off the above issues was had, in which, by instructions, the court withdrew from the consideration of the jury all items, which had accrued anterior to July 23, 1885, being four years,before this suit was begun, on account of the bar of the,statute of'limitations. The jury were instructed that the husband is liable for the support of his wife, and that thb statute of Nebraska authorizes the bringing of an action against the husband for any sums plaintiff had been required to pay out for the wife’s support in the insane hospital; that if defendant’s wife, became insane and was eomnpt.ted Jo said insane hospital where the plaintiff Douglas county, bad been compelled to . pay fpr her support and treatment, said plaintiff could recover from said defendant said' amount so expended. The defendant requested the.giving;, of certain instructions submitted on his behalf,
The evidence was introduced by the contending parties upon the respective theories indicated by the pleadings, and thus by demurrer, the evidence, and the instructions given and refused there .is presented unequivocally for’de-1 termination the proposition whether or not the statute of this state authorizes the bringing of an action against- a husband for any sums the county may have been required to pay out for the support of his wife in an insane hospital of the state. The defendant in error attempts to modify-the sharp outlines of this proposition by calling attention to the fact that the information of insanity, as it is called, was signed and sworn to by plaintiff in error. Thisyhowever, as its name imports, was simply a sworn statement that Mary M. Baldwin was a fit subject for custody and treatment in the hospital for the insane, as affiant- verily believed, and that she.had a legal settlement in said Douglas county, and asking that the necessary steps should. be taken to investigate her condition as the law in such cases required. This was only a request that the board investigate her condition and ascertain whether or not such de-r rangement of the mind existed as that the patient should be sent to the insane hospital for care and treatment, her maintenance being simply incident thereto. Upon alikq showing by another person the same steps would have foE
The statute under which the liability of the plaintiff in error is claimed to have arisen is chapter 40, Compiled Statutes of Nebraska; particularly section 48, which is in the language following:
“See. 48. The provisions herein made for the support of the insane at public charge shall not be construed to release the estates of such persons, nor their relatives, from liability for their support, except from the cost of board, care, and treatment while in the hospitals of the state, which cost of board, care, and treatment shall be borne by the state; and the commissioners of the several counties are authorized and empowered to collect from the property of such patients, or from any person or persons legally bound for their support, any sum paid by the county in their behalf, as herein provided; and the certificate from the superintendent, and the notice from the auditor of state, stating the sums charged in such cases, shall be presumptive evidence of the correctness of the sum so stated. If the board of county commissioners, in the case of any insane person who has been supported at the expense of the county, shall deem it a hardship to compel the relatives of such patient to bear the burden of his or her support, they may relieve such relatives from any part or all of such burden, as may seem to them reasonable and just.”
Under the provisions of the section just quoted, thé cost of the board and treatment of the inmates of the insane hospital must be borne by the state. Let us now consider the manner and extent to which the state is entitled to' reim
In Richardson County v. Frederick, 24 Neb., 596, the relation of brother or sister to the afflicted was held not to justify this special exaction, and in Richardson County v. Smith, 25 Neb., 767, the same freedom from liability was adjudged as to the children of the insane. In the. case at bar, the liability is charged by reason of the marital rela-; tion existing between the patient and the plaintiff in error., It is insisted that this liability exists because the husband is legally bound for the maintenance and care of his wife. The evidence in this case shows that the husband never failed to meet these requirements. It was upon an inquisition of insanity duly held by proper county authorities that Mrs. Baldwin was adjudged insane and a proper subject for treatment in the insane hospital. In the language of Reese, Ch. J., in Richardson County v. Frederick, supra, “The insane person is not consulted as to whether he shall be deprived of his liberty or not, nor indeed ar§
We know of no principle of equity or justice that under these circumstances would imply a contract by the husband to answer for the treatment of his wife, furnished by the state in the interest of the general public. It would seem that the public thus benefited should defray all expenses incurred for its protection. Certainly, the husband is not liable therefor unless by virtue of the statute already quoted. As has already been intimated, perhaps, we more than doubt the existence of an enforcible statutory liability. The husband has already twice paid for the maintenance of the insane hospital. This was upon his property. If he is required to pay for the treatment of his wife, this payment is just as much a compulsory contribution to the maintenance of the insane hospital as was either of the others. It is in fact another form of taxation for the same purpose. The right to levy taxes can only be justified as being necessary for the performance of its functions by the state. No tax can be legally levied for any purposes foreign to those functions, and, even that far, taxation is tolerated only from the necessities of the ease. The collection of unnecessary revenue by the state is not taxation. It is robbery. The plaintiff in error has already paid his full proportion toward the maintenance of the insane hospital. More than that the authorities cannot constitutionally exact. Suppose
Reversed.