21 A.2d 371 | Conn. | 1941
The plaintiff brought this action to recover from the defendant expenses incurred for the support of Mrs. Georgiana Reynolds and her children, *187 under the provisions of General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1935, 663c, quoted, so far as material in this case, to the footnote,1 on the ground that their settlement was in the defendant town. The defendant conceded that until August 26, 1928, the Reynolds family did have a settlement in it, but it claimed that thereafter they acquired a settlement in the town of Colebrook; also that the facts did not bring the family within the class of persons for the support of which another town than that in which they actually lived was liable; and that the notice given to it did not meet the requirements of the statute. The court overruled these claims and gave judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant has appealed.
On August 26, 1928, Mrs. Reynolds' husband, with his family, moved to the town of Colebrook to take a position as resident manager of a farm there. From that time until September, 1936, they continued to live in Colebrook on the farm except for two intervals, one of five months and one of about a year, when the husband lost his position as resident manager of the farm and the family moved to Winsted in the plaintiff town and lived there. After September, 1936, *188 the family again lived in Winsted and then returned to another farm in Colebrook, where they resided some three months. In April, 1937, the family moved once more to Winsted and thereafter did not return to Colebrook. Between the first removal to Colebrook and the time when the family left that town, they did not live there continuously for any period of four years. The claim of the defendant is, however, that the removals to Winsted did not interrupt the continuity of the residence in Colebrook. The trial court has found that during each of the periods that the family resided in Winsted, Reynolds intended to make that his place of permanent residence, with no intention of moving or residing elsewhere but ready to take a job wherever he could get one. The defendant sought to strike out this finding and to have inserted in place of it one that, when Reynolds left Colebrook he intended to reside away from that town only temporarily and until he secured farm work or a residence in Colebrook. The most favorable construction in support of the claim of the defendant that can be given to the evidence, is that Reynolds did not intend to reside permanently in Winsted if he could find work on a farm in some other place, and that he always hoped to be re-employed by the owner of the farm in Colebrook where he had been resident manager.
Reynolds, in order to have acquired a settlement in Colebrook, must have "resided . . . four years continuously" in that town. General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1935, 662c; Cum. Sup. 1939, 558e. The word "resided" as used in this statute requires that one must have had a "`fixed, permanent, established residence or home,'" an "actual and not merely constructive residence"; that the person in question must have been an actual resident, "`even though he have a technical domicil elsewhere'"; Washington v. Warren, *189
The first sentence of the statute, under which this case is brought, provides that when a person not an inhabitant of the town in which he resides "shall become poor and unable to support himself," the selectmen of the town shall furnish him necessary support, while the second sentence provides that the selectmen of the town furnishing support to "a pauper belonging to another town" shall give notice of his condition to the town to which "such pauper" belongs. The defendant contends that the obligation of the town to which the person belongs to reimburse the town *190 furnishing the support is more restricted than the duty imposed upon the selectmen by the first sentence, to furnish support, because of the use of the word "pauper" in the second sentence.
In Professor Capen's book "Connecticut Poor Law," the early development of our statutes for the relief of the needy is traced in detail, and it suffices now to refer only to a few outstanding laws. In 1673 the General Court passed an act which provided that every town should maintain its own "poor," and this duty extended to any person remaining three months within the town who "comes to want relief" unless ordered to leave. Laws of 1673, p. 57. In 1789 it was provided that every town should support its own inhabitants "who may need relief" whether living in that town or any other and any town which had incurred expense in supporting an inhabitant of another might recover it in an action against the town to which he belonged. Laws of 1789, p. 386. In 1818 an act was passed which provided in the first section that whenever any person "shall become poor, and unable to support and provide for him, or herself at any town other than that to which he or she belongs, or in which such pauper, or paupers statedly reside," it was the duty of the person at whose house such "poor person" might be to notify one of the selectmen of the town and the town to which such "poor person" belonged would not be liable for any support furnished before the notice was given; and in the second section it was made the duty of the selectmen whenever a person not an inhabitant of a town should become "poor, and unable to support and provide for him, or herself," to furnish necessary support and give information to the town to which such person belonged. Public Acts, 1818, May session, Chap. 4. In the Revision of 1821 the provisions of the first section were omitted and the phraseology of *191 the second section amended to read that it should be the duty of the selectmen whenever a person not an inhabitant of the town but living therein should become "poor and unable to support him, or her self, to furnish such pauper" such support as might be necessary, and that the selectmen of the town in which "a pauper belonging to another town is chargeable," should give notice to the town to which "the pauper belongs" of his condition, with additional provisions as to the nature of the notice and the time when it is to be given. Statutes, 1821, p. 370. The law continued in this form until the Revision of 1875, when the language was changed substantially to that contained in our present statute. General Statutes, Rev. 1875, p. 199. The development of the statute makes it plain that the word "pauper" in the second sentence has the same meaning as the phrase in the first sentence referring to one who becomes "poor and unable to support himself."
The trial court has found that Mrs. Reynolds owned an undivided one-twelfth interest in a farm occupied by her mother which, while the plaintiff town was furnishing support, was conveyed by Mrs. Reynolds to her mother without consideration; but it has also found, with sufficient support in the evidence, that this interest had, as a practical matter, no market value and for the purposes of support was valueless to Mrs. Reynolds. The mere ownership of property by a poor person does not free a town from obligation to furnish support unless that property has some substantial value which could reasonably have been appropriated and made to contribute to his support. Wallingford v. Southington,
The trial court has also found that during the period when the family were receiving support, Mrs. Reynolds' mother owned a house and lot, without incumbrance, having a value of $3500, and Reynolds' father owned unincumbered real estate having a value of at least $3000. The defendant contends that the Reynolds family were not entitled to support as poor persons because they did not come under the provisions of the statute which requires every town to support such persons belonging to it as "have not estate sufficient for their support, and have no relations of sufficient ability who are obliged by law to support them . . . ." General Statutes, 1693. We assume for the purpose of deciding this case that 663c is no broader in imposing an obligation of support than is this statute. The obligation of relatives to furnish support is found in 1717 of the General Statutes as amended by 669c of the Cumulative Supplement of 1935 and 563e of the Cumulative Supplement of 1939. As far as material to the issues before us, it provides that when any person shall become poor and unable to support himself or herself and family and shall have certain relatives, including a father and mother, grandfather or grandmother, who are "able to provide such support," it shall be provided by them, *193
and that if they "shall neglect to provide it," then an action may be brought in which the court may order them to contribute to the support of the poor persons from the time of serving the complaint. Before the court can order relatives to furnish support, it must find that they are "`able to provide'" it and have neglected to do so. Tulin v. Tulin,
Nor can we construe the words in 1693 of the statutes "obliged by law to support," as meaning that a town in which there are poor persons belonging to another town must, in furnishing them necessary support, take the risk that there are relatives unknown to them but who may later be found of sufficient means to furnish support. The word "neglect" in 1717 of the statutes "imports something more than a mere omission — something more than a failure without fault. It imports an omission accompanied by some kind of culpability in the conduct of the party." Lathrop v. Lathrop,
The final claim of the defendant is that the notice given to its selectmen did not comply with the requirements of the statute. The only provision the statute contains with reference to the nature of the notice is that it shall state "the condition" of the poor person. "`The condition' referred to is that of needing and receiving public support. The statute does not demand that information be given as to the extent or quality of the support which the necessities of the pauper require, but information that his condition is that of one who is in receipt of public aid, as being poor and unable to support himself." Roxbury v. Bridgewater,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.