59 Wis. 604 | Wis. | 1884
The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was not of sufficient ability to support the paupers, within the meaning of sec. 1502, R. S. The plaintiff resided in the defendant town. Ilia divorced daughter came to his house with her children from the town of Clayton, where they had previously been living with her divorced husband. He notified the chairman of the defendant town of their condition. After that notice the plaintiff supported them for some time at least. Is he entitled to compensation from the defendant town for such support without any express contract or agreement?
The supervisors in the town wore expressly charged with the oversight and care of all poor persons in the town so long as they remained a town charge, and were expressly required to see that such poor persons were properly relieved and taken care of in the manner required by the statute. Sec. 1501, R. S. When anjr minor has become, or is likely to become, chargeable to any town, the supervisors thereof may bind such minor as an apprentice. Sec. 1511, R. S. When any person not a resident nor having a legal settlement therein, and having no means of support, is taken sick, lame, or otherwise disabled, in any town, the supervisors are expressly required to provide such assistance as they may
It is very evident from the general scope and purpose of these different sections of the statute that the legislature never intended that the supervisors of any town should knowingly allow any sick, lame, or otherwise disabled person, destitute of all means of support, to suffer for want of support, or to remain unburied in case of death, merely because such person had no legal settlement in the town, nor because the officers of such town had neglected their duty or failed to make a contract therefor in advance. Such a purpose would be contrary to the legislative policy of the state respecting weak, unfortunate, and helpless children or citizens. In the language of the present chief justice, in Mappes v. Iowa Co., 47 Wis., 32: “The law is founded upon the humane idea that a poor person has a right to live; and that when one, through age, disease, or misfortune, is unable to procure the means of bodily subsistence, he shall not die from want or exposure, but the property of the town in which he resides shall be chargeable with the expense of his maintenance.” The facts of that case distinguish it from this, but the language quoted is peculiarly applicable. Of course, the town where the pauper has a legal settlement is ultimately liable; but the town in which such person happens to be, destitute, and in absolute want, and without any means of support, with the knowledge of its supervisors, is also primarily liable. McCaffrey v. Town of Shields, 54 Wis., 648. The facts in that case clearly distinguish it from this.
In Town of Dakota v. Town of Winneconne, 55 Wis., 526, it was said that, “ assuming that the pauper had a legal settlement in the defendant town, then it could not, by neglecting its own legal duty, compel the plaintiff town to make the expenditures in question, and still be in a position to defeat a recovery upon the mere technical ground that the expenditures were not first contracted for nor authorized by the full board, and then not afterwards audited nor directed to be paid by the full board. The plaintiff town having given the defendant town the requisite notice to take charge of the pauper, the liability of the latter became fixed.” So here, if the plaintiff was not of sufficient ability to support the paupers, and assuming, as the evidence tends to show, that he gave the town the requisite notice to take charge of the paupers, then thereby the liability of the latter became fixed by statute. Town of Westfield v. Sauk Co., 18 Wis., 624. The liability being thus fixed and imposed by statute, cannot be rendered inoperative, nor defeated by showing that the supervisors neglected their duty and failed to make any contract. Nor is the primary duty and liability of the defendant town any the less stringent and absolute by reason
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.