The receiver of the Reading National Bank & Trust Company filed his first and final account as guardian of Florence M. Noll, a weak-minded person. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has filed a claim for the care and maintenance of Florence M. Noll at the Wernersville State Hospital
The Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 641, sec, 1, as amended by the Act of October 11,1938, P. L. 63, sec. 1, 50 PS §150, provides as follows:
“All moneys whatsoever due from the estate of a mental patient, or the persons liable under existing laws for such patient’s support, for the care and maintenance, including clothing, of such patient in a mental hospital owned and operated by the Commonwealth, shall be collected by the Department of Revenue, as collection agency for such institution, and shall be promptly transmitted by the Department of Revenue to the State Treasurer. For amounts due the Commonwealth from the counties, under existing laws, for the care and maintenance, including clothing, of the criminal insane in a mental hospital owned and operated by the Commonwealth, the Department of Revenue shall promptly, after the last day of each calendar month, transmit to the county commissioners of the several counties a certified account of the expenses of the care and maintenance, including clothing, of insane prisoners for such calendar month, together with an order payable to the Department of Revenue, drawn on the county commissioners of the county, who shall accept and promptly pay same to the Department of Revenue.”
The phrase “all moneys whatsoever due from the estate of a mental patient” is identical with the language of the Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 641, which
“The county may recover such expenses from the estate of the person or prisoner, or from the person liable for his support, but not from any poor district”: Act of July 11, 1923, P. L. 998, art. V, sec. 502, 50 PS §142.
The expense of the support of such patient would, as we have seen above, appear to be collectible only by the State Department of Revenue.
The statute does not in our opinion conclude or prevent the county from obtaining such credits from the Commonwealth as it may be entitled to by virtue of the payments represented by its claim. We hold simply that under the pertinent legislation the Department of Revenue of the Commonwealth is the proper collecting agency. After the Commonwealth has collected and received such moneys, the county or institutional district may present its claim to the proper authorities of
And now, to wit, May 18, 1942, it is ordered and decreed that the funds in the hands of the receiver available for distribution toward the care and maintenance of Florence M. Noll, at the Wernersville State Hospital, be paid to the Department of Revenue of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as collection agency for the Wernersville State Hospital.
