Commonwealth v. Ruckle

1 Pa. D. & C.2d 51, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164
CourtColumbia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 19, 1954
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C.2d 51 (Commonwealth v. Ruckle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Columbia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Ruckle, 1 Pa. D. & C.2d 51, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Kreisher, P. J.,

Ola and Edna Larish, age 73 and 72 years, respectively, are husband and wife, residents of the Town of Bloomsburg, unemployed, with no means of support. They are the parents of three adult sons and six daughters.

At the insistence of the Department of Public Assistance they filed a petition for support against all [52]*52of their children under the Act of May 23, 1945, P. L. 864 and 865, 62 PS §1973, which provides under subsection (a) that:

“The husband, wife, child, father and mother of every indigent person, whether a public charge or not, shall, if of sufficient financial ability, care for and maintain, or financially assist, such indigent person at such rate as the court of the county, where such indigent person resides shall order or direct.”

On the return day of the rule granted upon the presentation of the petition, a hearing was held and one of the petitioners, Edna Larish, the mother, testified that she and her husband were receiving assistance from the Department of Public Assistance in the total amount of $67.60 per month. That in addition thereto the one daughter, Mrs. Ethel Spaid, was contributing $10 per month, and another daughter, Mrs. Catherine Savage, was contributing $7 per month, and that contributions received from the other children were very small, infrequent and, in fact, nothing at all from some of them.

The executive director of the Columbia County Board of Assistance also testified that petitioners have been on the rolls of the Department of Public Assistance for the past six or seven years; that the two above-mentioned daughters have over a period of years made the above-mentioned contributions; that the department did not from their investigation believe that the sons and the four married daughters who were not contributing were of sufficient financial ability to contribute to the support of their parents and, therefore, agreed that this proceeding against them could be dismissed. Therefore, we do not deem it necessary to discuss the liability of the seven children which the department agrees are of insufficient financial ability to contribute.

The only remaining question is the amount which [53]*53the two daughters are and have been contributing, it being the contention of the department that their voluntary payments of $7 and $10 per month, under the circumstances, are grossly insufficient, and that they should contribute a much larger amount.

Mrs. Catherine Savage testified in her own behalf, and she explained that she is a widow and the mother of one son who is married and self-supporting. She gives her age as 51, and testified that she is in a poor state of health at the present time, but continues her employment at the Magee Carpet Company where she has been employed for the past 15 years because she has no other means of support. It appears that when she works full time she averages 37% hours a week, with a take-home pay of approximately $39. There are some weeks, however, that her pay is as low as $31 or $32. She lives in a rented apartment with the usual expenses for food, rent, clothing, telephone, insurance, electric and transportation to and from work. She testified that in addition to those expenses she has an average monthly doctor bill of $8. She states that for a number of years she has been giving her parents $7 per month, and that she is really unable to contribute this much when her work is slack and she does not work full time.

According to the scale set up by the Department of Public Assistance, it is the director’s testimony that they believe Mrs. Savage could contribute at least $15 per month. The director explained that the budget set up for the indigent parents would remain the same, and any additional contribution by either of these daughters would be deducted from the amount paid by the Department of Public Assistance and thereby save the State that amount, and the additional amount would not increase the amount being received by the indigent parents. Mrs. Savage further testified that she pays $45 per month rent for her heated apartment, [54]*54which is an item in and of itself that takes more than one week of her earnings.

In the case of Mrs. Spaid it appears that she is likewise employed in the Magee Carpet Company with an average take-home pay for full time, employment of approximately $41 per week; that she is married and her husband is also employed and they have one son who has just returned from the armed forces and is now endeavoring to secure a college education by taking advantage of the GI Bill of Rights, with additional assistance from his parents. He lives at home with his parents and attends the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, so that the item of food for the son is provided by his parents. It further appears that Mr. and Mrs. Spaid entered into an agreement to buy their home some years ago, and they have a weekly payment on account of the interest, principal, taxes and insurance of $20 per week on the home which is valued between $3,000 and $4,000. Mr. Spaid. .is employed at the Magee Carpet Company, and. his average take-home pay was not testified to., but we can assume, even though he is not legally responsible.for the support of these indigent persons, .that it is.: not a great deal in excess of Mrs. Spaid’s. Mrsi:,* Spaid testified that she is in ill health, but the doctor has. advised her to continue her employment because of her nervousness, and her doctor bill averages as much as $9 a week, as she visits the doctor two and three times a week and pays $3 each visit. She testified further that $5 was deducted ■ from her wages and sent to the bank on account of repairs to the home, which they are endeavoring to purchase. It is interesting to note that- even though both of these people are working, they drive a 1947 Dodge that still is not paid for, and they are unable to purchase a better car.

Mrs. Spaid further testified that her parents put her out of. the home when she was 14 years of age, at [55]*55which time she was forced to go to work, and further, that the contribution of $10 which she has been making she has been giving to the corner grocery man because she did not wish to put any cash in the hands of her father who, she feared, would use the money improperly by reason of his intemperate habits. It has been decided that even though a parent deserts a child and is completely unworthy of his aid when he becomes indigent, the child being of sufficient financial ability, is still liable for the support of the indigent parent. See Commonwealth v. Auman, 39 D. & C. 448.

The Department of Public Assistance contends that under the above enumerated facts, and in accordance with the scale of contribution which they have devised, that Mrs. Spaid should contribute to the support of her parents the sum of $57 per month, and that this amount added to the $15, which they contend Mrs. Savage should contribute, would make a total of $72, and then the department would only have to pay the parents $12.60 to make up the total present budget of $84.60, instead of their support payment of $67.60 to make up the total of said budget, since these two daughters are contributing but $17.

The above-quoted act of assembly, which is called the Support Law, is a statute in derogation of the common law, as there was no legal liability of a child to support a parent at common law and, therefore, the statute must be strictly construed. See Commonwealth v. Morrisey, 150 Pa. Superior Ct. 202.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Morrisey
27 A.2d 446 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Commonwealth v. Henderson
17 A.2d 692 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C.2d 51, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ruckle-paqtrsesscolumb-1954.