139 Mo. 303 | Mo. | 1897
DIVISION ONE.
This action is upon a demand presented for allowance in the probate court of Montgomery county in favor of the county against the estate of Ellen Collins, deceased, for the sum of $1,826.35 for that amount of money paid by the county to the State lunatic asylum, at Pulton, for the support of the said Collins at the asylum, from the fifth of March, 1880, to the twenty-fifth of August, 1893, to which she had been sent as a county patient.
The demand was allowed in the probate court for the sum of $607.30, and an appeal taken by the administrator to the circuit court where, upon atrial denovo, the plaintiff recovered a judgment for '$600. Prom which the- administrator appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, by which court the case was trans-ferred to this court.
The facts are agreed upon and are as follows:
About the year 1880, Ellen Collins became violently insane, and, by an order of the county court of Montgomery county, was placed in the State lunatic asylum as a pauper patient, and was maintained in said asylum as a county patient of said county, as pro
The refusal of the court to sustain- a demurrer to the evidence presents the only question in the case, and that is, whether a county can recover from the estate
It is well settled at common law that the provision made by law for the support of the poor is a charitable provision, from which no implication of a promise to repay arises, and moneys so expended cannot be recovered of the pauper, in the absence of fraud, without a special contract for repayment. Selectmen of Bennington v. McGennes, 1 D. Chipp. 44; Benson v. Hitchcock, Adm’r, 37 Vt. 567; Inhabitants of Deer-Isle v. Eaton, 12 Mass. 328; Inhabitants of Stow v. Sawyer, 3 Allen, 515; Charleston v. Hubbard, Adm’r, 9 N. H. 195. A person so relieved, whether he had or had not property, never was liable to an action for such relief at common law. Inhabitants of Grovelandv. Inhabitants of Medford, 1 Allen, 23. “The misjudgment of the officers of the poor as to the necessities of the person relieved, raises no implied promise on the part of such person that he will repay moneys expended in his behalf. City of Albany v. McNamara, 117 N. Y. 168. In view of these well settled principles of the common law, in many of the States laws have been enacted authorizing the recovery, by suit against the pauper, of moneys expended in his support. Such is the case in Pennsylvania, and it was upon a statute of this character that a recovery was upheld in Directors v. Nyce, 161 Pa. St. 82. But we have no statute of similar import. The only statute we have authorizing a recovery against any person for money expended in support of paupers is section 5557, by which it is provided that:
*309 “In all cases of appropriations out of the county treasury for the support and maintenance or confinement of any insane person, the amount thereof may be recovered by the county from any person who, by law, is bound to provide for the support and maintenance of such person, if there be any of sufficient ability to pay the same.”
Counsel for respondent insist that under this statute a recovery is authorized in this case, and the question is gravely asked: “If an action can be maintained against one who is legally liable for the support of the patient on account of an appropriation by the county, why could it not be maintained against the individual himself, or in case of his death against his administrator? ” The obvious answer is: Because the right of action is purely a creation of the statute, and the statute gives it in the-one case, and does not in the other. There is no principle of statutory construction to warrant the assumption that “a legal liability being upon others, if they are able pecuniarily to pay for the patient’s support, the law will imply a promise on tho part of the patient to pay for it himself, if able pecuniarily.” Upon which the judgment in this ease seems to have been based. The deduction is a palpable non seqiáter and to give it effect is simply judicial legislation. Whatever argument may be urged in support of the proposition that such ought to be the law should be addressed to the legislature and not to the courts. The judgment is reversed.
IN BANG.
Per Curiam. — The opinion heretofore delivered in the first division of the court by Brace, J., is now adopted as the opinion of the court in banc, and accordingly the judgment of the circuit court is reversed
MEMORANDUM.
Barclay, C. J. — According to the modern common law the estate of a lunatic is presumptively liable to answer for necessaries furnished for his support; but the inference of an obligation may be broken down by evidence of facts indicating a different intention of the person supplying such necessaries. Rhodes v. Rhodes (1890) 44 Ch. Div. 94. The law of Missouri permits a county to grant aid in the form of necessaries to an insane person from the fund for relief of the poor, even though such person is not wholly destitute of means. R. S. 1889, secs. 499, 511, 5558. Where such relief is granted by the county court, it seems to me (after an examination of all our statutory law on the subject) that the orders for such relief amount to a finding that the person aided is within the class which the statutes permit to be so aided. We must presume, in the absence of any contrary showing, that the county court acted correctly. It was competent for that court to grant to Mrs. Collins aid (in the form of necessary attention at the state asylum) notwithstanding she had a small estate of about $400. The action of the court in giving such relief can not be collaterally attacked after the death of the beneficiary so as to turn the charity into an obligation, in the absence of any special circumstances of fraud or other ground that might possibly furnish an exception to the rule stated.
Section 5557 gives an action to the county against certain relatives of the party assisted, despite the gratuitous character of the relief to the party himself. Those relatives could be held (even when the estate of