Opinion
In this case we are called upon to determine whether an adult child of a recipient of aid to the aged under the Old Age Security Law (Welf. & Inst. Code, div. 9, pt. 1, ch. 3, § 12000 et seq.) 1 may constitutionally be required to reimburse the state.
Plaintiff County of San Mateo (County) brought this action pursuant to sections 12100 and 12101 to collect from defendant accrued but unpaid monthly contributions of $20 each toward the support of his mother and to obtain an order requiring defendant to make such monthly contributions in the future. The case was tried without a jury upon a written stipulation of facts and without the introduction of any oral or documentary evidence. Judgment was rendered in favor of the County, and defendant appeals.
*965 Defendant is the adult son of Johanna Boss who since February 1965 has received $116.90 per month from the County under provisions of the Old Age Security Law. Mrs. Boss is 66 years old and unable to work; she has no income except the payments of aid to the aged and monthly payments of social security in the sum of $64.60. She owns her own home, which is valued at $31,800, but no other real or personal property of substantial value.
On February 25, 1965 the San Mateo County Department of Public Health and Welfare determined pursuant to section 12101 that defendant was able to and should contribute $20 per month to the support of his mother. At that time defendant was earning $755 per month as a tool room mechanic supervisor; at the time of trial he was earning $800.80 per month as a leadingman tool room mechanic. No other person was dependent on his income.
Defendant refused to contribute to his mother’s support in the amount determined by the department of public health and welfare. The County thereupon commenced the instant action.
The trial court found that the facts contained in the written stipulation of the parties were true and adopted the stipulation as its findings of fact. The court concluded that defendant was legally obligated to support his mother under sections 12100 and 12101 and that the County was entitled to judgment in the sum of $820 plus costs of suit. Judgment was entered awarding the County this sum and ordering defendant to make future monthly contributions of $20 or such other sum as should be determined by the County pursuant to section 12101.
The Old Age Security Law provides for the extension of public assistance to needy aged persons. The program is voluntary and is pursued with the stated intent “that employment and self-maintenance of aged persons shall be encouraged whenever feasible.” (§ 12001.) Under said law assistance is given to those persons who have attained the age of 65 years and meet certain other statutory requirements. (See § 12050.) One such requirement is that the recipient of aid “is not receiving adequate support from a husband or wife, or child able and responsible under the laws of this state to furnish such support. ...”(§ 12050, subd. (d).)
The Old Age Security Law also provides that the adult children of a recipient of aid to the aged shall be required to contribute to the recipient’s support to the extent of the child’s ability. Section 12101 provides: “The ability of an adult child to contribute to the support of a parent shall be determined in accordance with this section. [Par.] The maximum monthly amount an adult child shall be required to contribute *966 toward the support of a parent in receipt of aid under this chapter shall not exceed the amount specified by the Relatives’ Contribution Scale [which is set forth later in the section].[ 2 ] Regulations of the department shall prescribe the criteria, methods of investigation and test check procedures relating to the determination of the maximum amount any adult child may be held liable to contribute toward the support of a parent to the end that the required contribution does not impose an undue hardship upon the adult child and administrative time and effort are not expended on nonproductive activities. . . .”
Section 12100 which provides for enforcement of the duty of support created by section 12101, states: “If an adult child living in this state fails to contribute to the support of his parent as required by Section 12101, the county granting aid under this chapter may proceed against such child. Upon request to do so, the district attorney or other civil legal officer of the county may maintain an action in the superior court of the county granting such aid, to recover that portion of the aid granted as it is determined that the child is liable to pay, and to secure an order requiring payment of any sums which may become due in the future. [Par.] The granting of or continued receipt of aid shall not be held to be contingent upon any court action or order or the child’s compliance with provisions of Section 12101. . .
The provisions which are now contained in sections 12100 and 12101
3
have been enforced against the adult children of recipients of old age security aid.
(County of Los Angeles
v.
La Fuente
(1942)
*967
Defendant, however, contends that under the principles announced in
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Kirchner
(1964)
In Kirchner we held it to be a denial of equal protection of the laws to require an adult child to reimburse the state for the care, support and maintenance of his mentally ill parent in a state institution. We declared that “ ‘providing for sequestration and treatment, of persons in approprite state institutions—subject of course, to the constitutional guaranties —who would endanger themselves or others if at large is a proper state function; being so, it follows that the expense of providing, operating and maintaining such institutions should (subject to reasonable exceptions against the inmate or his estate) be borne by the state.' . . . [T]he cost of maintaining the state institution, including provision of adequate care for its inmates, cannot be arbitrarily charged to one class in society; such assessment violates the equal protection clause.” (Original italics.) (60 Cal.2d at pp. 719-720.) We further noted that neither family relationship nor presence or absence of wealth were adequate or rational bases for sustaining a classification. (Id. at p. 721.)
However, we did recognize in Kirchner that the costs of such care could, consistently with equal protection, be charged to those persons who had a preexisting duty to support the recipient of the care. (Id. at p. 719.) In a line of decisions since Kirchner imposition of liability upon the estate of the recipient of welfare, 4 upon the recipient’s spouse 5 and, where the recipient was a minor, upon his parents, 6 has been upheld as consti *968 tutional. In each cf these cases, it was found that the person upon whom liability was imposed owed a preexisting duty cf support to the recipient of the public assistance. Since the state discharges that duty of support to the extent it provides welfare assistance, it may reasonably seek reimbursement from those whose duty it discharges. Such a preexisting duty of support provides a rational ground for classification of those who must bear a disproportionate amount of the costs of the welfare program.
In the case at bench we deal with provisions of the Old Age Security Law rather than with the particular statute involved in the
Kirchner
case which purported to impose liability upon specified relatives for the care and maintenance of patients in state hospitals. (Former § 6650, now § 7275.) Nevertheless, we think the principles enunciated in
Kirchner
clearly apply to the instant case. (tenBroek,
California’s Dual System of Family Law: Its Origin, Development, and Present Status, Part III
(1965 ), 17 Stan.L.Rev. 614, 638-639.) As in
Kirchner
the granting of aid to the aged serves a public purpose and is a proper state function. In
County of Lcs Angeles
v.
La Fuente, supra,
The County admits that granting aid to the aged is a proper state function but contends that the rationale of
Kirchner
does not apply to this case because such aid primarily benefits the individual recipient rather than society at large. This argument flies in the face of the explicit recognition in
Kirchner
that the care and maintenance of the mentally ill involved in that case promoted both the societal benefit of “the protection of
*969
society from the confined person” and the private benefit of the confined person’s “own protection and possible reclamation as a productive member of the body politic.”
(Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Kirchner, supra,
The effect of imposition of liability under sections 12100 and 12101 is to charge the adult children of recipients of aid to the aged with a disproportionate share of the costs of providing for such aid. Therefore, the imposition of liability under those sections is constitutional only to the extent that there is a rational basis supporting the classification thereby established.
The County argues that there is such a rational basis in this case because defendant Boss had a preexisting duty to support his mother (see discussion at fns. 4, 5 and 6, ante). It contends that section 206 of the Civil Code 7 creates a preexisting duty on the part of adult children to support their needy parents. Under the principles discussed above, such a preexisting duty of support would provide a rational basis for the imposition of liability under sections 12100 and 12101.
The County’s argument, however, must fail because in this case Boss had no duty under Civil Code section 206 to support his mother.
We have had occasion before to note that the liability created by sections 12100 and 12101 is independent of that created by Civil Code section 206. “On this subject it is said in
County of Contra Costa
v.
Lasky
(1954)
supra,
Furthermore, it is clear that a person can qualify to receive aid to the aged and yet not be so destitute that his children will owe him a duty of support under Civil Code section 206. “The county is required by the Welfare and Institutions Code to pay aid to the aged who are ‘in need’ (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 2001, 2022 [cf. current § 12050]). The sections which set out the amount of aid allowed and the resources which an aged person may own without being disqualified from receiving aid, delineate the financial situation of one who is considered ‘in need.’ Manifestly, this is not the same as being ‘poor’ and ‘unable to maintain himself by work’ (Civ. Code, § 206). The county is required to pay old age security to persons who, although they are ‘in need’ according to the Welfare and Institutions Code, have considerable income and property, and who may be able to maintain themselves by work.” (Fns. omitted.)
(County of San Bernardino
v.
Simmons, supra,
It is obvious from the foregoing that one may be “in need” and thus eligible to receive aid to the aged and yet not be a “poor person who is unable to maintain himself by work” for purposes of Civil Code section 206. Such is the case here; Johanna Boss was qualified to, and did, receive such aid; yet she is not a “poor person who is unable to maintain [her]self by work” within the meaning of Civil Code section 206. Ownership of a $31,800 house does not disqualify her from receiving public assistance (§ 11152), but a person with an estate of that magnitude can
*971
not be said to be a “poor person.” Since Mrs. Boss is not a “poor person,” defendant, her son, owed her no duty of support under Civil Code section 206. As we noted in
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Kirchner, supra,
We do not hold, however, that the imposition of liability pursuant to sections 12100 and 12101 is in all instances a denial of equal protection. What we here say is that at least where the adult child owes the recipient of welfare assistance no duty of support under Civil Code section 206, the state may not, consistent with equal protection, charge the adult child with an unequally large portion of the costs of providing such welfare assistance. 8
Defendant makes the additional argument that sections 12100 and 12101 violate the principles enunciated in
Kirchner
because they impose liability upon the adult children of a recipient of aid to the aged without affording the children any right of recoupment against the recipient’s estate. This contention is based on the following language from
*972
Kirchner.
“Section 6650 by its terms imposes absolute liability upon, and does not even purport to vest in, the servient relatives any right of control over, or to recoup from, the assets of the patient. A statute obviously violates the equal protection clause if it selects one particular class of persons for a species of taxation and no rational basis supports such classification.” (
■ The judgment is reversed.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., and Burke, J., concurred.
Notes
Hereafter, unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
The Relatives’ Contribution Scale sets forth the maximum contributions to be required of an adult child as a function of the income of the child and of the number of persons dependent upon the child’s income. For example, for a child earning between $751 and $800 per month, the maximum required contribution is $40 per month if there is one person dependent on such income, but $20 per month if there are two persons dependent on such income.
Provisions similar to those now found in sections 12100 and 12101 were found prior to September 17, 1965, in former sections 2224 and 2181, respectively.
Estate of Preston
(1966)
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Kolts
(1966)
In
re Rickey H.
(1970)
Civil Code section 206 provides: “It is the duty of the father, the mother, and the children of any poor person who is unable to maintain himself by work, to maintain such person to the extent of their ability. The promise of an adult child to pay for necessities previously furnished to such parent is binding.”
We express no opinion as to whether the duty of support created by Civil Code section 206 provides a sufficient basis for rational classification of those who are required to pay a larger portion of the expense of providing welfare assistance. We note the indication in
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Bank of America
(1970)
