3 Wend. 193 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1829
By the Court,
It was objected on the trial that the contract should not be given in evidence, unless the p’aintiff shewed an original order of one or more justices of the county, adjudging the pauper to be chargeable upon the town of Coxsackie, and ordering the overseers to provide for and maintain him. The 25th section of the act for the relief and settlement of the poor, (1 R. L. 287,) directs, that when any poor person belonging to any city or town shall apply. for relief to an overseer, such overseer shall apply to a justice of the peace, and the justice and overseer shall en-quire into the circumstances' of such person, &c. and the justice shall make an order for a weekly or other allowance. The acts of the overseer and justice in making the allowance are sufficient evidence of the settlement of the pauper. The order thus made is a sufficient voucher for the overseer in the settlement of his accounts, for so much money as he shall pay under it; and such order, of course, is an authority for the overseer to contract for the support of the pauper to the extent of such order. The statute does not require a formal order in such a case, adjudging the settlement of the pauper to be in such town. The order in this case, though not very formal, is an order from the justice authorizing an annual allowance of $45; and no objection was made to the fulfilment of the agreement, till since the passing of the act of November 27th. 1824.
In King v. Butler, (15 Johns. R. 281,) an overseer was held responsible upon his absolute promise to pay, without shewing any order of a justice. It was held to be the duty of the overseer to procure the order, as his authority for granting relief; and, of course, in the absence of all evidence on the subject, as every public officer is presumed to have done what was his duty to do, he is presumed to have obtained the order previous to his furnishing relief, or making a promise to that effect. In that case, the legal as well as moral obligation upon the officer to afford assistance was held
It was contended upon the argument that the contract, if valid, was rescinded or determined by the notice of the 5th March, 1825. To this it is answered, that the defendants could not put an end to the contract without taking back the pauper. This seems to be reasonable; but the question is one of strict legal right. As the contract was for no definite period, unless perhaps by construction for one year, either party was at liberty to put an end to it at the end of the year. And as no objection was made by the plaintiff as to the particular time of its termination, it seems to me the contract was determined at the time when the plaintiff received his pay up to the 5th March, 1825, as of that date, as it appears that the object of the defendants was to leave the question of liability unembarrassed, and it was so understood by the plaintiff. If the law of 1824 had not been passed, the parties would have been left as they were when the contract was entered into. The plaintiff was under no obligation to support the pauper. On application to the overseers of Hillsdale, they would have sent the pauper to the town of Coxsackie, and there would have been an and of the matter, But by the 8th
There is another ground of defence, that by tbe act of 1824, the pauper in question became chargeable to the town of Hillsdale, and therefore Coxsackie is not bound to provide for him at all.
I cannot believe that such a result was intended by the legislature. The act of 1813 is not repealed any further than that some of its provisions are virtually repealed by being inconsistent with the later act. The act of 1813 proceeds upon the principle that every town shall support the poor who have a settlement there., The act of 1824, on the contrary, proceeds upon the principle that every county shall support all the poor who become such within its bounds; retaining the old law as to the duties of the several towns with'each county. The legislature were not aware, probably, that every town did not keep their poor at home. The act of 1824 is prospective in its terms, but no provision is made for. returning poor who were out of their own town when the act was passed. As therefore no provision is made for returning the
Judgment for defendants.
The question alluded to in the above opinion of a suit by one town against another, upon a state of facts similar to the above, arose and was decided during the present term, in the cause of The Overseers of the Poor of the town of Mamakating v. The Overseers of the Poor of the town of Deerpark. Two paupers belonging to the town of Deerpark, in Orange county, were kept and provided for by the overseers of Deerpark, in the town of Mamakating, in Sullivan county, during the years 1823 and 1824, and up to the first of April, 1825-In September, 1824, the overseers of Deerpark were applied to, to take away the paupers, but refused. In the fall of 1825, the paupers were carried to Deerpark, the overseers refused to receive them, and the persons bringing them were threatened with a prosecution. The paupers returned to Mamakating and were provided for by the overseers of that town, who expended $152 in their support, and then bought their action against Deerpark to recover back the money thus expended. A verdict was taken for the plaintiffs under the direction of the presiding judge at the circuit, the Hon. James Emott, who expressed his opinion that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. This court, for the reasons assigned in the above case, set aside the verdict, and ordered a new trial, costs to abide the event.