Commonwealth v. Frost, Com. of Welfare

172 S.W.2d 905, 295 Ky. 137, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 172 S.W.2d 905 (Commonwealth v. Frost, Com. of Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Frost, Com. of Welfare, 172 S.W.2d 905, 295 Ky. 137, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 185 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

As the end of the fiscal year has approached, the Commissioner of Public Welfare has found that there is a large sum remaining of the appropriation for the year for the payment of Old Age Assistance. If it should not be distributed before June 30th the appropriation for the special purpose will revert to the General Fund of the Commonwealth and an equal amount will not be available from the Federal government. He proposed to distribute a portion of this balance to those on the rolls as additions to their May and June pensions. The Attorney General questioned the legality of the proposed action and suggested that the Commissioner obtain a declaratory judgment respecting the matter. However, he declined to bring the suit for the Department of Welfare. The Commissioner then had it instituted through private counsel against the Attorney General. His special demurrer based upon the ground that he was not a • proper party was sustained. An amended and substituted petition was then filed against individual representatives of the class who would receive the bonus and of the class whose applications are pending and who would not benefit by it. The Attorney General, without objection, filed an intervening petition in the name of the Commonwealth, with himself as relator, in which he spoke not only for the Commonwealth but essayed to represent “all those who have filed applications for old age assistance and who have not received any grants or payments from the funds available for that purpose.” The circuit court declared the proposed plan of the Commissioner of Public Welfare to be legal. The Attorney General appeals.

The General Assembly appropriated $4,250,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1943, to the Department of Welfare “For ordinary expenses of operation and cooperation with the Federal Government under the Social Security Act approved August 14, 1935, including adjustments of prior year or current year accounts necessary to comply with the Federal regulations, and for the administration of Old Age Assistance * *. Also, for administration of the child welfare program *140 and for the administration of the existing statutes pertaining to aid to dependent children and to aid to the blind provided these two statutes are held valid by the Court of Appeals.” KRS, page 353; ch. 1, Acts of 1942. The State appropriation, to the extent of its proper distribution, has been and will be supplemented by the same amount by the Federal Government. The statutes define the classes of children, aged and blind persons eligible for the benefits and outline the duties of the Department of Welfare in respect to administration. KRS, Chaps. 200, 205, 207, Sections 200.010 et seq., 205.010 et seq., and 207.010 et seq. The administration of these funds is cooperative and in a large measure subject to the rules and regulations of the Federal Bureau.

In the administration of the Old Age Assistance the Department, through field representatives and an office staff, investigates applications and measures their qualifications by the standards described in the statute and more definite regulations of the Federal Bureau, and when approved makes an allotment or grant of a monthly sum to each of them according to their respective individual necessities and the total money available. During the course of the year the Department has paid only 70% of those amounts. About 12,500 applications have not been investigated. In this record the Commissioner of Public Welfare essentially justifies the limitation both in amounts and in beneficiaries paid as having been required by prudent administration of so vast a program, including the conservative maintenance of a reserve that the fund might not be exhausted before the end of the year. Among the reasons are (1) the necessity of withholding funds necessary to meet anticipated payments to “Needy Blind” and “Dependent Children,” the validity of the act providing for relief of such children not having been declared until December 4, 1942, so that its operation could not be begun until after January, 1943; (2) the impossibility of definitely determining the requirements in advance because of the many contingencies and factors involved, including the number of new approvals and the removals from the rolls by death or otherwise; and (3) the impossibility of making a greater number of investigations of new applicants because of limited personnel, and inability to keep or employ qualified field agents.

In March, 1942, the Department had “frozen” the pension roll to those then on it for reasons deemed suffi *141 cient. In January, 1943, the Franklin Circuit Court, in a suit brought by the Attorney General against the Commissioner of Public Welfare, issued an injunction requiring the Department to open up the lists and cause all applications for assistance to be investigated and to approve and pay all who fall within the class described by the statutes, and that the Commissioner administer the law “without favor or discrimination.” The Commissioner has maintained that he has faithfully and diligently complied with this judgment in so far as it was possible with the force at his command and as a matter of fact has added many names to the roll. In addition to this service of investigating applicants for Old Age Assistance and reinvestigating the condition of each pensioner annually to determine his continuing eligibility, they have had to perform a multplicity of other duties in relation to other programs of the Federal Social Security Bureau. In short, this justification is that the Department has been swamped and overcome by the number of applications and the requirement of rigid investigations before approval.

In order to save as much as possible of the appropriation, both State and Federal, for the purposes intended and avert reversion and loss, it had been agreed by the Commissioner of Welfare and Federal Bureau to pay those who have received only 70% of the allowances, the equivalent of 30% additional for each of the months of May and June. There are approximately 55,000 persons on the roll who would receive this sum. This additional distribution or bonus will consume around $235,000 of the State appropriation and the same amount received from the Federal Government. Even with this distribution there will be something like $350,000 or $400,000 to revert to the General Fund.

The Attorney General charged that the inability to use all the appropriations has been due to negligence and inefficiency and the violation of the injunction referred to. But he offered no evidence in support of his severe charges. The only witness heard was the Director of Public Assistance in the Department of Welfare. Her testimony revealed the immense volume of work laid before and accomplished by the Division, and gave the causes of the situation which now exists. She undertook to justify them. From the same facts and figures the Attorney General undertakes to draw support of his *142 charges. It does not seem material to the decision of the legal questions to relate these facts or the respective deductions of the parties.

The trial court delivered the following opinion:

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W.2d 905, 295 Ky. 137, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-frost-com-of-welfare-kyctapphigh-1943.