Bremer County v. Schroeder

206 N.W. 303, 200 Iowa 1285
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 303 (Bremer County v. Schroeder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bremer County v. Schroeder, 206 N.W. 303, 200 Iowa 1285 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

The action is by the appellee county to recover of appellant the- amount alleged to have been expended by the county in boarding and keeping A. B. C. Schroeder, appellant’s father, at the county poor'farm, and in furnishing him with medical attention and burying him. It is not disputed that the father was an inmate of the county farm from December 11, 1915, to his death on March 2, 1919, or that the amounts claimed were expended by the county in keeping him at the poor farm and in securing medical attention for him and for his burial.

I. It is insisted by appellant that the action is in equity, and is triable here de novo. On the contrary, the petition was entitled in law, the action was essentially an action at law for the recovery of a money judgment only, and a jury was expressly waived by the parties.

*1287 *1286 II. Appellant complains that no application was made to *1287 the district court by the township trustees for an order compelling appellant to maintain his father, as provided for in Sections 2218 and 2219, Code of 1897 (Sections 5302, 5303, and 5304, Code of 1924). It was not necessary that appellant’s liability be first fixed under these sections, in order for the county to recover. Boone County v. Ruhl, 9 Iowa 276; Hamilton County v. Hollis, 141 Iowa 477.

III. It is insisted that there was no proof that those who purported to act as township trustees in removing A. B. C. Schroeder to the county poor farm were such trustees, or ever legally qualified as such. The evidence shows ^at they were holding the office of trustee, and -were acting as such with the acquiescence of the public. They were, therefore, at least trustees de facto. The acts of the officers de facto are as valid and effectual, where they concern the public or the rights of third persons, as though they were officers de jure, and their authority to act cannot be questioned in collateral proceedings. Stickney v. Stickney, 77 Iowa 699; State v. Powell, 101 Iowa 382; Metropolitan Nat. Bank v. Commercial St. Bank, 104 Iowa 682, and cases there cited.

IV. It is said that there was no application to the trustees for relief of A. B. C. Schroeder as a poor person, as required by Section 2234, Code of 1897 (Section 5328, Code of 1924).

It is settled that the application may be made by another than the person to be relieved. County of Clay v. County of Palo Alto, 82 Iowa 626; Hamilton County v . Hollis, supra. There was undisputed testimony that A. B. C. Schroeder asked one Wernicke to help him; thát he could not talk the American language vqjy well, and wanted him to go with him to see the trastees, because he was freezing to death and had no wood or fire; that Wernicke so informed the trustees, and they visited appellant and his father; that, after being informed that appellant had said “he wouldn’t take care of the old gentleman,— that he was through with him, ’ ’ — the father said he would have to go to the county farm. It is clear that there was sufficient application by and in behalf of the father for public relief.

V. It is also said that there was no written order by the *1288 township trustees admitting A. B. C. Schroeder to the poorhouse, as required by Section 2244, Code of 1897 (Section 5343, Code of 1924), providing that:

“No person shall be admitted to the poorhouse except upon the written order of a township trustee or member of the board of supervisors, * *

The steward of the poor farm might have refused to receive Schroeder as an inmate, in the absence of a written order; but, after he had received him, and after the county had furnished him support there, with full knowledge on the part of the board of supervisors, we fail to see how the fact that there was no written order for his admission in any way affects the county’s right to recover from one liable for his support the amount so expended. In Collins v. Lucas County, 50 Iowa 448, where a physician sought to recover of the county for services rendered to a pauper at the request of the trustees, and it was insisted that his bill was not certified by the trustees to be correct, it was said that it was competent for the board, to waive the trustees’ certificate, if satisfied of the truth of all that the certificate would, show. In County of Clay v. County of Palo Alto, supra, which was an action by the county furnishing relief, to recover therefor from the county of the pauper’s settlement, Collins v. Lucas County, supra, was followed, and it was held that such a certificate was not essential to the right to recover the reasonable costs and expenses so incurred, from the county of his settlement. These authorities are, in principle, controlling here.

The right of the county, under Section 2222, Code of 1897 (Section 5309, Code of 1924), is to recover any money expended for the relief or support of a poor person under the provisions of the chapter relating to the support of the poor, from any of his kindred liable tberefor. • The question upon the county’s right to recover is whether the person relieved was a poor person, within the contemplation of the statute, whether the county expended money for his support, and whether the defendant is one who is made liable by statute; not whether the county might have refused relief because some requirement of the statute as to the manner in which application should be made, or the relief furnished, was not complied with.

*1289 It being • assumed that A. B. C. Schroeder was a “poor person, ’ ’ under the statute, the question, as said in Polk County v. Owen, 187 Iowa 230, becomes one of paymaster: Who shall maintain him, — his son or the public?

VI. What has been said is also applicable to the contentions that there is no record of the action of the trustees; that no notice was given the board of supervisors by the trustees of their action in sending Schroeder to the poorhouse; and that there is no record of action by the board of supervisors upon tJ.e matter.

The absence of a record of the action of the trustees authorizing relief to a pauper and warning him to return to the county of his settlement was held, in Bremer County v. Buchanan County, 61 Iowa 624, to be no obstacle to a recovery by the county furnishing relief, from the county where the pauper had a legal settlement. See, also, Tatlock & Wilson v. Louisa County, 46 Iowa 138, and Ferguson v. Davis County, 57 Iowa 601, as to the lack of necessity for a record of the action of the board of supervisors. It clearly appears that the board of supervisors had notice that Schroeder was being cared for in the poorhouse. It was said in Mansfield v. Sac County, 60 Iowa 11:

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 303, 200 Iowa 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bremer-county-v-schroeder-iowa-1925.