23 Colo. 87 | Colo. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
An application was made to the county court of Arapahoe county, asking for an order to send William T. House to the Keeley Institute, at Denver, Colorado, at the expense of the county, for treatment and cure, as a drunkard, under the provisions of chapter 74, Sess. Laws 1895. The proceeding is in conformity with the requirements of the act, and the facts disclosed in the record clearly bring the case within its provisions. The court below denied the order solely upon the ground that the statute was unconstitutional, and this is the only question presented for our determination.
The act, by its first section, provides: “ Any friend of an habitual drunkard, * ® * or any officer of any charitable organization, may file a petition in the county court in the county where such drunkard may reside, setting forth the sex, financial condition, the age, as near as may be, and the nature and extent of the disease of such drunkard in reference to the use of alcoholic, narcotic or other stimulants, and stating the belief of petitioner or affiant that such disease has passed beyond the control of said drunkard, and asking for an order to send such drunkard to an institution for the treatment of such disease at the expense of the county. The petition or affidavit may also contain such other facts as the applicant may deem proper in order to inform the court of the condition of such drunkard. Such petition shall be verified by the petitioner, and the petition or affidavit shall be approved and signed by ten (10) freeholders of the county.”
Section 2 provides for the hearing of such petition upon notice to the county attorney, and to the drunkard, unless he voluntarily appears, and that, if it appear to the county judge that the matters set forth in the petition are true, and
Section 4 provides for the verification and presentation of its claim for the treatment of such drunkard by the manager or person in charge of the institution furnishing such treatment.
Section 5 provides that, upon presentation of such claim “ to the board of county commissioners of the county of the drunkard’s residence, they shall allow the same, as in case of other claims against the county, and make an order on the county treasurer for the payment of the same; Provided, all such claims shall be reasonable and not in excess of current rates; that no such claim shall be allowed for a greater amount than twenty-five (25) dollars per week for the treatment, including medical attendance and medicines of such drunkard, nor for a greater amount than seven (7) dollars per week for his board, lodging and keeping.”
Section 6 defines a drunkard as “any person who has acquired the desire of using alcoholic or malt drinks, morphine, opium, cocaine or other narcotic substance used for the purpose of producing intoxication, to such a degree as to deprive him or her of reasonable self-control.”
The object sought to be attained by this act is to provide for a class of its poor who have become helpless and unable to care for themselves, and is clearly within the govermental functions of the state, and a proper exercise of legislative power, unless inhibited by some constitutional limitation. The duty of the state to make provision for the care and maintenance of those who, through misfortune or disease, are unable to take care of themselves, has been too long recognized and established by the legislation of this country to admit of question. The indigent poor and infirm, the
It is contended by the county attorney that this act offends against section 34, art. 5, of our constitution, which declares: “ No appropriation shall be made for charitable, industrial, educational or benevolent purposes, to any person, corporation, or community not under the absolute control of the state, nor to any denominational or sectarian institution or association.” And also against section 35, which provides: “The general assembly shall not delegate to any special commission, private corporation or association, any power to make, supervise or interfere with any municipal improvement, money, property or effects, whether held in trust or otherwise, or to levy taxes, or perform any municipal function whatever.” The contention is that section 34 prohibits, not only the appropriation of state money for the purposes mentioned, but as well money belonging to the county; the argument being that a county is a mere political subdivision of the state, created for the purpose of keeping the machinery of government in motion, for the convenience of the general public,— in other words, that the county is a mere agency and a part
And in the case of Pattison v. Supervisors, 13 Cal. 175, the court, speaking upon a like question, said: “ The argument, more fully developed by the learned counsel, seems to be this: The state is forbidden, by the eighth article of the constitution, to create debts over three hundred thousand dollars, or to loan its credit, etc.; the counties are component parts of the state ; the state cannot authorize the creation of this debt by its separate subdivisions any more than by itself
Section 10, art. 8, of the constitution of New York, as amended in 1874, provides that “ neither the credit nor the money of the state shall be given or loaned to, or in aid of, any association, corporation or private undertaking. This section shall not, however, prevent the legislature from making such provision for the education and support of the blind, the deaf and dumb, and juvenile delinquents as it may deem proper. Nor shall it apply to any fund or property now held, or which may hereafter be held, by the state for educational purposes.”
By an act of the legislature, passed in 1871, the supervisors of the county of New York were authorized to levy and collect, by a tax upon the taxable property of the city and county of New York, the sum of $5,000, and to pay the same to the “ Shepherd’s Fold,” a private corporation organized for the purpose of earing for orphaned and friendless children.
In the case of Shepherd's Fold v. Mayor, etc., 96 N. Y. 137, the validity of this act was assailed as being in contravention of the foregoing provision of the constitution, upon the ground that the money authorized to be raised was money of the state, and its payment inhibited thereby. Upon this, contention the court say: “ The first question which arises
We think it would be doing violence to the express letter and manifest intendment of section 34 to hold that it inhibits the legislature from conferring upon counties the power to use county funds in the treatment and cure of their indigent inebriates in the manner provided in the act in question, and more clearly untenable is the claim that the act contravenes the provisions of section 35. The design and purpose of this section is to prohibit the delegation to private corporations of the exercise of powers strictly governmental, and we are unable to perceive wherein the act delegates any such power to the institute. The service it renders in the treatment and cure of inebriates is in no sense the performance of any of the inhibited municipal functions. While the act may in some respects be defective, and subject to some of the criticisms urged against it, it is not, in our opinion, obnoxious to any of the constitutional objections urged, and must be upheld as a legitimate exercise of legislative power.
We have carefully considered all the other constitutional objections so ably and exhaustively urged by counsel, but deem it unnecessary to specifically comment upon them, since our conclusion is that they in no way affect the validity of the statute. The judgment of the county court is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed.