33 Misc. 2d 650 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1962
In this proceeding under section 102 of the Social Welfare Law, the Commissioner of Welfare of Nassau County seeks to compel respondent, who is the paternal grandfather, to contribute to the support of his three grandchildren. At the close of the Commissioner’s case, respondent moved to dismiss the proceeding on the ground that the Commissioner had failed to show any attempt to proceed against the father or the maternal grandfather who, it is conceded, resides, as does respondent, in Queens County. The motion to dismiss is denied and the parties are directed to appear on March 2, 1962, at 2:00 p.m. for further hearing.
The statutory scheme established by sections 101 to 110 of the Social Welfare Law does not require that the Commissioner of Welfare proceed in any particular order against the persons made liable by that statute (seeMatter of Campbell, 208 Misc. 281, 283). The legislative purpose was to transmute the moral obligation of the relatives named in the statute into legal liability and thus “ the protection of the public purse.” (Anonymous v. Anonymous, 176 Misc. 103, 105; Matter of Rickey, 126 N. Y. S. 2d 261; see Klebes v. Condon, 260 App. Div. 238; Fuller v. Galeota, 271 App. Div. 155, 159.) Strict construction of the statute (because in derogation of the common law) does not mandate its distortion or the frustration of the legislative aim. Subdivision 1 of section 102 of the Social Welfare Law empowers the Commissioner to bring proceedings “ to compel any person
Respondent complains that if the Social Welfare Law be so construed, the Commissioner is empowered arbitrarily to impose the entire support burden on one grandparent although both be residents and equally able to provide support. Were the Commissioner given such power and were there no procedure by which one in respondent’s position could obtain redress against others whose liability is equal or greater in degree than his, grave constitutional question would arise (Mallatt v. Luihn, 206 Ore. 678; Hansis v. Brougham, 10 Wis. 2d 629 ; see Matter of Zorach v. Clauson, 303 N. Y. 161, 174, affd. 343 U. S. 306). That the Social Welfare Law does not require the Commissioner in the first instance to bring all persons potentially responsible before the court does not, however, mean that no procedure exists whereby respondent may obtain redress. Since, appar