City of Syracuse v. County of Onondaga

25 Misc. 371, 55 N.Y.S. 634
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 Misc. 371 (City of Syracuse v. County of Onondaga) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Syracuse v. County of Onondaga, 25 Misc. 371, 55 N.Y.S. 634 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Ross, J.

It is claimed by the learned attorney for the city •of Syracuse:

(a) That in the Eggleston case no settlement was ever obtained in the city of Syracuse.

(b) Assuming that there was a settlement in either case, that by virtue of the provisions of chapter 203 of the Laws of 1897, such settlement was lost by the absence of the husband and that the husband having lost his settlement, their respective families have no settlement, and are properly chargeable to the county of Onondaga.

(c) That in the Swerin case, the father has obtained a settlement in New York city, which becomes the settlement of his family, hence not chargeable to the city of Syracuse.

By the learned attorney for the county of Onondaga:

(a) That in each of these cases a settlement was obtained in the city of Syracuse, and that such settlement has not been lost by reason of any of the existing facts. That a husband who violates his legal duty to provide for his family, cannot, by abandonment, acquire a settlement elsewhere any more than if he were a fugitive” from justice.

[374]*374(b) That if such a settlement can be obtained by the father, that their respective families have by necessity obtained a separate Settlement in the city of Syracuse.

There was at common law no duty resting upon either a town or county to support a poor person. One of the first statutes for the relief of poor persons was passed in 1562, 5 Eliz., chapter 3,. which provided for a levy by justices of the peace of the Quarter Sessions of a tax for the relief of the poor of a parish upon those parishioners who obstinately refused to pay reasonably towards their relief; and also provided that if there were more poor persons in a parish than they were able to relieve, the justices of the peace may license so many of them as they shall think good to- beg. And even in the beginning of this century the poor laws in England were in a very inefficient state. Sanderson’s History of England, page 848.

So that the liability of these respective municipalities is wholly statutory. The statutory provisions which determine the liability in thése cases are in brief as follows: Chapter 225 of the Laws of 1896 (being the Poor Law), section 40:

“ Settlements, how gained.— Every person of full age, who shall be a resident and inhabitant of any town or city for one year, and the members of his family who shall not have gained a separate settlement, shall be deemed settled in such town or city, and shall so remain until he shall have gained a like settlement in some other-town or city in this state, or shall remove from this state and remain therefrom one year. * * *

Section 41. Qualification of last section.—A woman of full' age, by marrying, shall acquire the settlement of her husband; Until a poor person shall have gained a settlement in his or her oto right, his or her settlement shall be deemed that of the father, if' living.” * * * Chapter-203 of the Laws of 1897 amended the Poor Law by the insertion of a new section to be known as section 57, which reads as follows: "Settlement, how lost.— A person who has gained a settlement in a town or city loses the same by a-continuous residence elsewhere for one year.” Section 42 of the Poor Law provides as follows: * * * . Every poor person,, except the state poor, shall, be supported in the town or county where'he may be, as follows:

“ 1. If he has sained a settlement in any town or city in such „ county, he shall be maintained by such town or city.

[375]*375“ 2. If he has not gained a settlement in any town or city in the county in which he shall become poor, sick or infirm, he shall be supported and relieved by the superintendents of the poor at the expense of the county.” * * *

Did Eggleston gain a settlement in the city of Syracuse prior to February 8, 1897,_ the time he left his family? He came to Syracuse in January, 1896, and remained continuously until his departure in February, 1897. His family arrived in March, 1896, and he and they occupied a house he had rented before their arrival, and they kept house and lived together until the time he left. Section 40 of the Poor Law, already quoted, makes the condition of obtaining a settlement that such person * * * “ shall be a resident and inhabitant of any town or city for one year.” * -» *

"What constitutes a residence.— I. There are very few adjudged cases in this state defining who are residents and inhabitants within the meaning of our poor laws. In re Town of Hector, 24 N. Y. Supp. 479, is a carefully considered decision of the learned county judge of Schuyler county upon this subject. The poor persons under consideration were two Italian laborers who had left their homes and families in Italy, and were employed in railroad construction and liable to be discharged at any time, and free to leave their employment, and living in rough shanties built by railroad contractors. It was held that they had not gained a settlement in the town of Hector, although they had actually been located and lived in that town for over a year. The county judge points out the difference between the construction of the courts in construing the meaning of the word “ residents,” when used in those statutes seeking to give a remedy against absent debtors, and those in relation to levying taxes, and the statute in question. In the former case a man may have more than one residence, but only one domicile. The county judge holds that the cases furnishing the best analogy are those where the jurisdiction of the court depends upon the residence or inhabitancy of one or both parties in a particular locality, and after citing several cases, states on page 481, as follows: “It seems to the court that these cases may be regarded as establishing the legal proposition that the words ‘ resident and inhabitant,’ in the statute under consideration, mean a locality of existence as permanent and firmly fixed as is legallv conveyed by the word ‘domicil^,’ and that at once disposes of this appeal. It has long been settled law that every person has a domicile some[376]*376where. If he has not acquired one elsewhere, he retains his domieile of origin, and to effect a change of domicile’ the fact and intent must concur; that is, there must be, not only a change of residence, but an intention to abandon the former domicile, and acquire another as the sole domicile.”

de Meli v. de Meli, 120 N. Y. 485 and 491. Dupuy v. Wurtz, 58 N. Y. 556 the question involved in the last case was whether there was a change of domicile for the purpose of succession. On page 561, Mr. Judge Rapallo says: There must be both residence in the alleged adopted domicile and intention to adopt such place of residence as the sole domicile. Eesidence alone has no effect per se, though it may be most important, as a ground from which to infer Intention. Length of residence will not alone effect the change. Intention alone will not do it, but the two taken together do constitute a change of domicile.”

In the case of People v. Platt, 117 N. Y. 159, the defendant was appointed to an office, one of the qualifications of which was that he must be “ a resident of the Metropolitan Police District,” and it was claimed that he was not such a resident.

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Related

City of Minneapolis v. Village of Nerstrand
300 N.W. 204 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)
In Re Settlement of Baalson
300 N.W. 204 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)
In Re Settlement of Golden
234 N.W. 7 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
25 Misc. 371, 55 N.Y.S. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-syracuse-v-county-of-onondaga-nycountyct-1898.