Creighton v. County of Pope

54 N.E.2d 543, 386 Ill. 468
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1944
DocketNo. 27713. Appellate Court affirmed in part and reversed in part; circuit court reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 54 N.E.2d 543 (Creighton v. County of Pope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creighton v. County of Pope, 54 N.E.2d 543, 386 Ill. 468 (Ill. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs, Nancy Ann Creighton and four other persons, individually, Mae Hatton, administratrix of the estate of Gus Hatton, deceased, and Arthur Poe, administrator of the estate of Mary Lou Poe, deceased,.filed their second amended complaint in the circuit court of Pope county against the defendant, the county of Pope, seeking awards representing the balance alleged to be due and owing them as benefits under “An act for the relief of the blind.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943, chap. 23, par. 279 et seq.) Defendant answered the complaint, evidence was heard and judgments rendered in favor of plaintiffs and against defendant. In a second action, Carlos Craig, Augusta Wilson and J. L. Owens, individually, and the administrators and administratrices of the estates of six deceased persons, sought like relief against the county of Pope. The cause was dismissed as to Owens upon his own motion. This second action resulted in judgments in favor of Augusta

■ Wilson, Carlos Craig and the administrators and administratrices of the estates of five decedents, and a judgment in favor of the defendant and against the estate of one of the deceased persons. Defendant prosecuted separate appeals to the Appellate Court for the Fourth District from the judgments in favor of the respective administrators and administratrices of the estates of the deceased persons and, also, from the judgment in favor of Craig. The Appellate Court affirmed the judgments rendered in favor of all the personal representatives and reversed the judgment as to Craig and remanded the cause as to him. (Creighton v. County of Pope, 320 Ill. App. 256.) A certificate of importance has been granted, and the record is before us for a further review. Craig having accepted the judgment of the Appellate Court adverse to him, only the propriety of the judgments in favor of the seven administrators and administratrices is presented for decision.

Each of the deceased persons whose estate is represented by an administrator or an administratrix was, for a long period of time prior to his or her death, a blind person, within the contemplation of the Blind Relief Act. They had satisfied the provisions of the statute entitling them to its benefits. Their names had been placed upon the blind pension rolls of the county and they had been paid benefits so long as the county was financially able so to do. At the time of death, benefits accruing to each of these persons remained unpaid in amounts varying from $25 to $1775. Defendant resisted payment to the personal representatives on the ground, among others, that any claims which may have accrued to the deceased persons did not survive to their administrators, heirs, legatees or devisees and that, in consequence, no sum was due to the administrators of the several estates. The sole controverted question here is whether the right to claim the unpaid installments of blind relief benefits accruing before the death of a beneficiary survives and passes to his personal representative. Disposition of this issue requires recourse to the provisions of the applicable statute.

Section 1 of the Blind Relief Act, as it obtained in 1939 when these actions were instituted, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 23, par. 279,) makes it lawful and obligatory for each county of the State to contribute money from the charity or general funds of the county toward the support of each blind person who comes within the statutory provisions. The State, in turn, it is provided, shall reimburse each county to the extent of one-half the sums contributed in compliance with the act. Section 1 y2 provides that if the general fund of any county is insufficient to pay for such support, the county shall levy and collect a special tax for the purpose of paying the support. Section 2 designates the beneficiaries of the law, namely, all male persons over the age of twenty-one years and all female persons over the age of eighteen who are declared to be blind, in conformity with the act, and declares that they shall receive as a benefit $365 annually, payable quarterly, “upon warrants properly drawn on the treasurer of the county of which such person or persons are residents.” Section 2^ defines a blind person as one whose sight is so defective as to render him unable to perform the ordinary duties or tasks for which eyesight is essential. The third section denies the benefits of the.statute to persons, among others, who, if unmarried, have incomes in excess of $465 per annum, and, if married, where the total annual income of the applicant and spouse is $1000 or more. Section 4 makes it the duty of the board of county commissioners or supervisors to appoint a regular practicing physician as examiner of applicants for benefits. The next section prescribes the duties of the examiner and fixes his remuneration. Section 5 provides, in part, that the examiner shall endorse on all applications a certificate to each applicant, “showing whether he or she is blind or not.” By section 6, persons seeking the benefits of the act are required to appear before the county clerk and make affidavit to the facts which bring them within the provisions of the law, the affidavit to be deemed an application for benefits. The county clerk, by section 7, is required to register the names, addresses and numbers, and dates of the examination of each of the applicants who have been determined to be entitled to benefits and, upon this registration and his certificate to the county commissioners or supervisors with the names and residences of each applicant, complying with the act, “such applicant shall be entitled to said benefit from and after the first day of the months of January, April, July and October, thereafter.” By section 8 it is made the duty of the board of county commissioners or supervisors to provide, in its annual appropriation, for the payment of benefits to the persons so entitled, and “to cause warrants on the county treasurer to be drawn, properly endorsed, payable to each of said persons in said county each quarter in each year thereafter, during the life of said persons, while they are residents of said county or until said disability is removed.” Section provides for the levy and collection each year of an annual tax for the purpose of creating a fund to be known as the “Blind Relief Fund,” out of which shall be paid the State’s one-half of the contribution to the blind. The ninth section ordains that a person who makes a false affidavit in order to obtain the benefits provided shall, upon conviction, be deemed guilty of perjury. The tenth section imposes the duty on each county to continue to contribute $250 towards the relief of each blind person, without reimbursement or contribution on the part-of the State, until the special State tax provided for in section 8J2 has been levied, collected and paid into the Blind Relief Fund in the State treasury. It will be observed that the statute makes no provision for the survival of the right of action for blind benefits.

A review of the provisions of the statute discloses that its primary purpose is the alleviation of the necessitous circumstances of persons afflicted with blindness. The right to relief is, necessarily, a right personal to the blind person. The explicit provisions of sections 7 and 8 dispel all doubt in this respect. In particular, the seventh section provides for the registration of applicants for blind relief, their certification to the county commissioners or supervisors and, upon these requirements being met, the applicant shall be entitled to benefits.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E.2d 543, 386 Ill. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creighton-v-county-of-pope-ill-1944.