16 Ga. 89 | Ga. | 1854
delivering the opinion.
Now, our construction of the Statutes, in such case made and provided, is that the bond was intended for the protection, only, of the county, as a county. That it was designed to keep the child out of that class of paupers for which the authorities of the county might feel themselves under obligations to provide, and which may be said to be liable to become chargeable to the •county. And this construction seems plainly authorized by ■the language of the Statutes.
The act of December 16, 1793, provides, that “any Justice ■of the Peace, who, of his own knowledge, or upon information ■on oath, &c. of any free white woman having a bastard child, or being pregnant with one, which it is probable will become -chargeable to the county, may issue a warrant for the arrest of the mother, and require bond, in the sum of 1502, with security,
The Act of 1809 declares, that “ it shall be lawful for the Inferior Courts of this State, when any child or children have or shall become chargeable to the county, where bonds are taken, or hereafter to be taken, in conformity to an Act passed the 16th day of December, 1793, for the maintenance of bastard children, to institute an action on all bonds so taken or hereafter to be taken, in manner aforesaid, and prosecute the same to judgment; and it shall be lawful for them to recover the full amount of said bond or bonds; which judgment or judgments shall remain open, and be subject to be appropriated by the Courts aforesaid, from time to time, as the situation and exigencies of the said bastard child or children may require”.
It will be perceived, that in the first of these Acts, the Legislature refer to a bastard child, “ which it is probable will became chargeable to the county ” ; and in the second, to such bastard child or children, as “ have or shall become chargeable to the county”. And that in the latter act, provision is made for the enforcement of the bond by the Inferior Court, in such .a way as serves to show, that the Legislature contemplated prolection to the interests of the county, as a county.
From these things we conclude, that by our Law, there is no breach of such bond, until the bastard child or children has or have become chargeable to the county, and that not until then can the Inferior Court bring suit upon it.
That the answer which we give to this question, may be correctly appreciated, we premise, that in this State, we have no
To the Inferior Court, a wide discretion, in the premises, is thus left. They are to inquire into the circumstances of the poor, to determine who shall be considered and treated as a pauper, and whether or not ho or she shall become chargeable to the county. A bastard child is not, therefore, chargeable to the county, until the Inferior Court has given their sanction to its becoming so, and by some act, fixed this status for it. It may be born of a mother, an inhabitant of the county, who is unable to support it, or to pay the expenses of her lying in; yet, she may be so situated, (living, perhaps, with parents or friends, who are willing and able to maintain her and her child,) as to make it expedient that the Court should not treat the child as chargeable to the county.
Rut no such evidence exists in this case, and the judgment must be affirmed.