Lead Opinion
It seems to us that on the record the judgment is wholly unwarranted and unjust, and it is therefore, reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).— The proposition in the foregoing opinion that the “ liability of the defendant can be predicated only on proof that she [defendant’s daughter] is unable, because of physical or mental disability, to earn a
As I view it, the statutory liability of a person for the support of an indigent relative (providing, of course, that such person be found financially able, and related within the prescribed degree) arises the moment such relative becomes a public charge, unless there be others of nearer kin from whom such support can be enforced. If the defendant’s daughter and her children are shown to be proper subjects for relief at the hands of the county, then the county may, in turn and at once, call upon her relatives in the manner prescribed by the statute to assume the burden. It is doubtless true that, as to the young children, their father and mother are first chargeable with their support; but when it is shown that the mother herself is destitute, and unable by herself to provide a maintenance for them, and that the divorced father resides in another county, has another family on his hands, is impecunious, and that a judgment against him would be utterly unavailing, then I hold that the duty of the county to extend relief is clear, and the right of the county to call upon other relatives, who may be able to respond, is perfect.
If this be not the case, and the mere fact that a destitute child has an able-bodied parent takes it out of the category of ‘(poor persons,” within the meaning of the law, without reference to the question whether the liability of such parent can be effectively enforced, then the existence of a father or mother in another State, or across the seas, or in the penitentiary, 'or in the army of able-bodied tramps who infest the country, is all that need be shown to support an excuse for leaving the child to starve. Surely such was not the intent of the law. It is true that the statute defines a poor person as one who “ has no property exempt or otherwise and is unable because of physical or mental disability to earn a living
That such destructive literalness of interpretation is not to be indulged this court, in common with many others having occasion to pass upon similar statutes, has already held. In Hardin County v. Wright County, 67 Iowa, 127, the plaintiff county, having furnished relief to the family of one Hutchinson, whose legal settlement was in the defendant county, brought suit to recover the expenses thus incurred. The claim was resisted because it appeared that Hutchinson in fact had property to the amount of $1,000, though not within the jurisdiction of either county, and was not, therefore, a poor person, within the meaning of the law; but this court reversed a judgment for the defendant, saying: “It does not follow that, because the applicant may have some property, his condition is not such as to require relief. Take the case at bar. Here was a large family. Some of them doubtless were helpless, even in a state of health. The head of the family and several of the members were stricken down by a serious sickness, and sickness among them continued for six months. They had recently removed to the place where they were taken sick, and were probably among comparative strangers, and may have been without money or credit. Yet the fact that they had $1,000 worth of property somewhere in-the world did not preclude the possibility that they were proper subjects for relief.”
It has been held by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire that one is to be deemed a pauper when he “ cannot relieve his immediate wants without disposing of property which is essential, and which, if parted with, must be im
Now, take the case at bar. The defendant’s daughter may have been able to support herself, had she been free to perform ordinary domestic service, but with several small children, not yet able to care for themselves, and dependent upon her for shelter, nurture, and oversight, it goes without saying that the labor and service which a country neighborhood affords to one so situated and reasonably within her power of performance may well have been wholly inadequate to keep herself and her little ones from want. If, in the case above cited, the able-bodied wife, who is prevented from
Nor is it any answer to say that the father, though divorced from the mother, is in duty bound to support these children. He may be under obligation to support them, but he does not do it, and it is affirmatively shown that he is not in a financial condition which would render legal proceedings to enforce that obligation of any avail whatever. It is not for the court to inquire into the cause of the poverty of this woman and children. Tt is the fact of hfelpless poverty, and not its cause or the moral responsibility of the indigent person or of others for existing conditions, of which the law inquires. It may be unnatural and reprehensible in the father of these children, even though himself, poor and embarrassed by other obligations, to refuse contribution to their support; but it is scarcely less unnatural in the defendant, who, though not wealthy, is at least in comfortable circumstances, to refuse the comparatively trifling aid which would enable his daughter and young grandchildren to avoid'becoming public charges.
As to the facts in the case at bar it must also be borne in mind that the action is at law, and we are required to consider the testimony in its most favorable aspect in support of the judgment of the trial court. Moreover the printed record does not, in my judgment, contain any showing or claim that all the testimony has been properly preserved by bill of exceptions, or that we have it all before us.
I think the judgment appealed from ought to be affirmed.