62 Me. 229 | Me. | 1873
The alleged pauper, Julia A. White, is a woman sixty-two years old, an invalid since she was fifteen, usually eon-fined, to a dark room on account of an affection of the eyes, mostly dependent upon her father (with whom she lived in Livermore, for sixteen or seventeen years prior to 1843,) until his death in 1846, since which she has lived with her brother, George W. White, and been supported by him up to December, 1870, as one of his family. The family removed from Livermore to Dead River Plantation in 1843, prior to which time her father had conveyed to her brother what property he had in consideration of a life maintenance for himself. The father and brother with the rest of the family, except the pauper, went to Dead River in July, 1843. She, being too feeble to go then, was removed the next winter on a bed in a sleigh. They lived in that Plantation until the fall of 1865, when the brother bought a farm in Payette, and moved there with his family in November. Respecting- the removal of his sister from Dead River to Payette, he testifies in substance as follows : “She left a day or two before I did when we broke up at Dead River. We put a bed into a wagon and brought her out twelve miles to the house of one Hutchings, in Plantation No. 2, not to visit but to stop, because we did not consider her able to ride from there in a wagon. She thought it would be easier to stop there till sleighing, and did so. I went for her then and brought her to Fayette December 27, 1865. She had always been a member-of my family. I suppose she intended to go to Payette with me as soon as she was able; I think likely she would have gone then if she
There would be not a little force in the latter proposition if there could be such a thing as having a constructive home in a place, by virtue of an intention to go and live there before any actual arrival and bodily presence. Doubtless the wife or one of the minor children of George W. White, thus detained on the way would have had a settlement in Fayette in November, 1870. But it would not be by reason of their intention unaccompanied by bodily presence, but because they would follow the settlement of the husband and father. But we cannot hold that a sister thus dependent upon fraternal charity would have the home of her brother by reason of her intention and his consent, prior to her actual arrival. If intention of the pauper to establish a home in a particular place is necessary, bodily presence is equally so to effect such establishment. A home once established may be maintained without the concurring bodily presence, if the intention continues unchanged through all temporary absences. But in the outset one cannot make a home in a place by merely intending to do so. Whensoever the intention is conceived the home does not exist until the intention is executed by an actual concurring bodily presence.
Nor is there anything in the case of Hampden v. Levant, 59 Maine, 557, that militates against this. That case simply holds that a home may be abandoned by one who is absent bodily, if he forms, while thus absent, an intention thereafterwards to make his home elsewhere. It does not follow that his home from that time is in
In the case at bar the pauper began to have ahorne in Fayette, on her arrival there, December 27,1865, and the requested instruction was rightly refused.
It is" urged that the notice was premature; but we think not. It was given when two of the overseers of Fayette had had information that the brother refused to support the sister longer without compensation from the town, and when the second overseer who received the information from his associate had assented to the temporary arrangement made by the one to whom the brother applied, for her maintenance by the brother. She was then chargeable to the town, and a majority of the overseers had assented to the furnishing of supplies. It was not necessary to the validity of the notice that a specific bargain should have been concluded with the brother as to the amount of compensation with which he would be content, nor that she should have actually received and consumed any supplies for which Fayette could at that moment have maintained an action against Livermore. Without this, enough had been done to constitute a furnishing of supplies by Fayette.
The object of the statute requiring notice from the town furnishing the supplies to the town where the pauper has his settlement, is to prevent the accumulation of a bill, and give the town, which is ultimately responsible, an opportunity to remove the pauper to the place of settlement, where the presumption is that he may be supported with greater convenience and less expense.
The difficulty in the way of the plaintiffs in Verona v. Penobscot, 56 Maine, 11, was not that no supplies had been furnished by the plaintiff town when the notice was given, but that, as the law stood when the supplies were furnished and the notice was given, and for two months afterwards, the persons to whom they were furnished, could not be made chargeable as paupers by receiving aid from the town. The case supposed, arguendo^ by the learned
Any dicta in the charge of the presiding judge, implying that the giving of this notice to the overseers of Fayette by the brother, was all that was necessary, without any assumption by them of the support of the pauper were purely immaterial, and could not have harmed the defendants, because the uncontradicted testimony in the case showed the assent of two of the overseers, before the notice was made, to the direction given by Jones to the brother, respecting the furnishing of support. Upon the question of good faith, the defendants complain of both the verdict and the instructions ; but we do not see that they are justly aggrieved by either. There is-no evidence that the brother was under any legal obligation or contract to support the sister, nor was he bound to relieve the town from which they both removed, and where she had her settlement, at the expense of the town where he had his home. There seems to be no reason to doubt the utter and complete destitution and helplessness of the sister, the moment the brother declined to support her longer. The instructions required the jury to find good faith on the part of the overseers of the plaintiff town in furnishing the supplies. They allude to the familiar fact that bad faith in matters of this kind consists, for the most part, in furnishing supplies where there is no destitution; but they do not ignore the possibility that bad faith may be shown in other ways. If the defendants’ counsel wished instructions more specific, he should have requested them.