298 N.W. 179 | Wis. | 1941
Upon a petition by Alice Goff and the Dodge County Pension Board and its members, a controversy was submitted to the county court under sec. 269.01, Stats., upon a verified case containing the facts upon which the controversy depends. After a trial of the agreed case upon the facts stated in the petition the court made findings of fact upon which a judgment was entered from which Dodge County Pension Board and its members appealed. In the proceedings under sec. 269.01, Stats., in an agreed case the court found that Alice Goff, hereinafter called the "plaintiff," and Emma Goff were joint tenants until the latter's death on March 24, 1940, under a deed dated October 30, 1916, which conveyed land in Dodge county, Wisconsin, and that upon plaintiff's surviving her cotenant a certificate of survivorship was issued to her by the county court; that from July, 1936, to her death Emma Goff received old-age pension assistance from Dodge county, and a claim for lien for the assistance furnished was filed on August 18, 1936, by the Dodge County Pension Board, hereinafter *645 called the "defendant," in the office of the register of deeds for Dodge county, but released on September 27, 1938, and a second claim for lien was filed on March 25, 1938; that $292.50 had been paid for assistance furnished prior thereto and $527 were paid after that date; and that there is a controversy as to whether the claim therefor is a valid lien against the property now owned solely by Alice Goff, as the surviving joint tenant. The court concluded that the joint-tenancy relation continued up to the death of Emma Goff on March 24, 1940, when, by reason of the termination of Emma Goff's joint tenancy, plaintiff became the sole owner free and clear of the claims for liens filed for the assistance furnished by the pension board; and that the claim for lien constitutes a doubtful claim and cloud on plaintiff's title and should be removed.
On this appeal from a judgment entered accordingly the defendant assigns as error the court's rulings that the second claim for lien, filed on March 25, 1938, did not destroy or affect the joint-tenancy interests of plaintiff and Emma Goff, and that plaintiff, as the surviving joint tenant, owns the property free and clear from the said second lien filed for sums advanced by Dodge county as old-age assistance to Emma Goff. No question is raised by defendant in respect to the first claim for lien because under sec.
On the other hand, plaintiff contends that sec.
The defendant's contentions must be sustained. Prior to the enactment of sec.
"All old-age assistance paid to any beneficiary under sections 49.20 to 49.51 . . . shall become and constitute a lien as hereafter provided and shall remain a lien until it issatisfied. . . . From and after the time of such filing in the office of the register of deeds the lien herein imposed shallattach to any and all real property of the beneficiary presently owned or subsequently acquired, including joint-tenancyinterests, in any county in which such certificate is filed for any amounts paid or which thereafter may be paid under sections 49.20 to 49.51, and shall remain such lien until it issatisfied. . . . Such lien shall be enforceable by the county filing the certificate after transfer of title of the real property by sale, succession, inheritance, or will, in the manner provided by law for the enforcement of mechanics' liens upon real property."
These provisions evince the legislative intent that the lien filed to secure repayment of the assistance furnished shall attach to the beneficiary's joint-tenancy interest, as well as *648 all of his other real property, and shall continue until it is satisfied, and that the lien shall be enforceable after, — but not before, — a transfer of the beneficiary's title by a sale during his life or by "succession, inheritance or will" as the result of his death. So long as he retains his interest in the property which is subject to the lien he is not to be disturbed. It is only when he parts with his interest and as the result thereof can no longer look to the property as his place to live or for income that the lien is enforceable. The common sense of this legislative policy is evident. Instead of obtaining security by a transfer of the beneficiary's property during his lifetime, that end is to be effected in a more considerate manner by providing that the assistance paid "shall become and constitute a lien" which shall from and after the filing thereof attach to his property presently owned or subsequently acquired, including joint-tenancy interests, and "shall remain such lien until it is satisfied;" and that "such lien shall be enforceable . . . after transfer of title of the real property by sale, succession, inheritance, or will in the manner provided by law for the enforcement of mechanics' liens." It was certainly not intended thereby to provide but a lien on a joint-tenancy interest which was to terminate with the death of the recipient of old-age assistance, and thereupon be unenforceable. That would be so inconsistent with the legislative history and evident plan in this respect that we cannot conclude that such an ineffective and useless consequence was intended by the legislature. On the contrary, it was evidently intended that there was to be provided by the legislation in question a lien which was to be effective upon the filing of a claim therefor and it was to continue effective so that it could be enforced by the foreclosure thereof upon, — but not before — the death of the recipient and the consequent transfer of title to his joint-tenancy interest by virtue of the succession thereto of surviving joint tenants.
It is further contended by plaintiff that if sec.
"That application, the grant of assistance, and the acceptance of that assistance constituted a contract between the plaintiff and the official boards having to do with the matter of the old-age assistance granted to her. Plaintiff entered into that contractual relation with defendants on the only terms they were authorized to deal with her — the terms of the statute — so she must be held to have consented to the lien which the statute enacted as a condition of the granting of the old-age assistance she thus obtained."
As there was likewise such consent on the part of Emma Goff, the resulting lien on her joint-tenancy interest under the provisions in sec.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a judgment that provides that the lien in question is valid and enforceable upon the interest which Emma Goff had in the property when the lien was filed.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the opinion filed. *652