Davies v. State ex rel. Boyles

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 593
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 8, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 593 (Davies v. State ex rel. Boyles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies v. State ex rel. Boyles, 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 593 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

This is an action in error, brought to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas in overruling the demurrer of the plaintiff in error — the defendant below — and in rendering judgment against the plaintiff in error in favor of the defendant in error. The proceeding below brought on the relation of James L. Boyles, by the state against the auditor of Lucas county, Ohio, was for mandamus to compel the defendant to obey the provisions of a certain aet providing for the payment to blind persons of an allowance from the public funds of $25, quarterly. The only question presented for the consideration of this court is as to the constitutionality of the law providing for this allowance. The [594]*594statute is found in 97 O. L. 392 (Lan. R. L. 2955 et seq.), and its provisions are, substantially and so far as concerns the questions which here arise, as follows:

“That it shall be the duty of every county to contribute such sum or sums of money from the poor or general expense fund toward the support of every worthy blind person free from vicious habits, as hereinafter provided.
“That all male blind persons over the age of twenty-one years, and all female blind persons over the age of eighteen years, who are declared blind in the manner hereinafter set forth, and have no property or means with which to support themselves, shall be entitled to, and receive, not more than twenty-five dollars per capita quarterly, and that the probate judge shall authorize the auditor to issue warrants for the amounts due such persons.”

The statute further provides:

“The said blind persons must be hona fide residents of the state of Ohio for five years, and in their respective county one year. ’ ’

There are other provisions in the state for the purpose of carrying out. the general provisions which I have recited, but it is unnecessary to read them. The act is attacked upon the ground that it violates certain .provisions of the constitution of the United States and also certain provisions of the constitution of the state of Ohio. The special .sections of the federal constitution are See. 2, Art. 4; Art. 5 — one clause in it — ■ and Sec. 1, Art. 14; and as to the Ohio constitution, See. 2, Art. 1, and Sec. 26, Art. 8.

It is urged that not only does this act provide an allowance for one special class of indigent people, but that it unjustly discriminates among persons of that class; it sets off the blind as recipients of the public bounty and then among the blind excludes from the benefits of the act those, who are unworthy, or of vicious habits and those who have not been residents of the state for five years or who have not been residents of the county for one year and it excludes all who are not adults.

The defendant, on the other hand, insists that not only does the act not violate the state constitution, but that it has express warrant to sustain it in Sec. 1, of Art. 7 of the state constitution, or, if that section is not broad enough to justify the legislature in the enactment complained of, that the legislature, under its general police power, might have made the same enactment.

Without spending very much time upon the claims of the plaintiff in error, that the law makes an unjust discrimination among classes, it [595]*595is sufficient to say that the blind have been from time immemorial, perhaps, recognized as a class entitled, not only to the sympathy of those not so afflicted, but also to some degree of aid to be accorded by the public, which is a recognition of the Biblical maxim, that, “The strong should bear the infirmities of the weak. ” It is impossible for human beings who are strong and who do not need such aid, to shut their eyes to the infirmities of the weak or to turn coldly away from them and say they will not give aid. The question, of course, will arise in all such cases as to whether the allowance is a reasonable one or not; whether it is capricious or arbitrary; whether it is an act of unjustifiable paternalism on the part of the legislature, or whether, being not capricious or unreasonable, it finds warrant in the sense of reasonable people that the aid should be given. Nor does it seem to us that the act is amenable to criticism because it makes some discrimination among the blind, by withholding its benefit from those of vicious habits, or found to be unworthy, or who have not had the required residence in the state or county, or who are not adults. There is another provision made by the legislature in Ohio for the benefit of blind persons who have not reached the age of majority. We have institutions provided for their education, in order that they may be better able to maintain and support themselves in later life; but there is no such provision upon our statute books for institutions, technically so called, wherein adult blind persons may be maintained, so that they would seem to be some reason found in this fact for the giving of aid to those who, not being sustained in any public institution, are still at the disadvantage of not having the sense of sight to aid them in obtaining a livelihood and so keeping them from becoming a public charge. The objection to the statute that it gives its benefits only to those who have acquired a certain residence in the state, might be urged with equal force against all of our poor laws. There must be an acquired residence in the county. It might be urged with equal force against the bestowal of the elective franchise upon those who have acquired a certain residence in the state, county or voting precinct. It might be urged with equal force against the statute which provides that 'a person when bringing an action for divorce must have had a residence in the state a year and must be a bona fide resident of the county where the action is instituted.

We think, then, that this statute is not open to criticism upon any of those grounds.

But it is claimed that it is the taking of private property by taxation and using it for a private and not for a publie purpose. It seems to the court, however, that public interests are subserved by the aiding of [596]*596persons who might become a public charge, if left to their own resources, to such an extent that, by combining the small fund given them by the state with what they may be able to earn in those limited vocations which blind people may find, they might be able to maintain themselves and avoid becoming a charge; just as our infirmary directors are permitted to give out-of-door relief to many people instead of forcing them within the walls of the infirmaries. This law may be wise, or unwise ; expedient, or inexpedient; it may not be good policy to grant any sort of out-of-door relief to the poor; it may not be good policy to select among the many classes of the helpless, the blind, and say that a special fund shall be set apart for them, and yet this law does not stand alone in this respect. We have statutes providing for the relief of indigent soldiers; we have a soldier’s relief commission which apportions and distributes the fund. The theory of the legislators may have been that the mere fact that a person is blind, raises a presumption of some degree of helplessness entitling the person to relief.

On the other hand, it is urged that the special provision of our constitution, Sec. 1, Art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-state-ex-rel-boyles-ohiocirct-1905.