Eddy County v. Wells County

11 N.W.2d 60, 73 N.D. 33, 1943 N.D. LEXIS 59
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1943
DocketFile No. 6860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 60 (Eddy County v. Wells County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddy County v. Wells County, 11 N.W.2d 60, 73 N.D. 33, 1943 N.D. LEXIS 59 (N.D. 1943).

Opinion

Nuessle, J.

This action was brought to determine the residence of one John Johnson and his family for the purposes of poor relief and to recover for payments made by the plaintiff Eddy County in that behalf. The case was tried to the court and judgment was ordered and entered for the plaintiff. The defendant Wells County thereupon perfected the instant appeal.

There is no controversy as to the facts. Johnson and his family for many years prior to 1931 had been residents of Wells County. In May of that year his wife and children left him and moved to New Rockford in Eddy County. Johnson continued to live in Wells County until December 1931, when he also moved to New Rockford and took up his abode there with his family. He and his family lived there until 1935 when he left them. The family continued to live in Eddy County. While they were living there Wells County furnished them with relief during the months of January, February, March and April of 1932. Their next relief was provided by Eddy County for the *35 months of November and December of 1932, and through January, February and March of 1933. Thereafter they received no relief until December 1933, when Eddy County again provided it and continued to do so through 1931 and from that time on. Thus it appears that from May 1, 1932 to December 1933, a period of nineteen months, the family lived in Eddy County and received no relief from any source excepting from Eddy County in November and December of 1932, and January, February and March of 1933, a period of five months; that is, during fourteen of the nineteen months they received no relief. The controversy now is as to which county, Eddy or Wells, was responsible for their relief from and after December 1933. In determining the question it must be remembered that in this case chapter 97, Session Laws 1933, defines the manner in which residence is acquired and lost for purposes of poor relief. The provisions thereof pertinent here and on which the case turns, are to be found in § 1, subsec 4, which reads: “Each male person and each unmarried female over the age of twenty-one years, who shall have resided one year continuously in any county in this state, shall thereby gain a residence in such county. Each minor whose parents, and each married woman whose husband has no residence in this state, who shall have resided one year continuously in the state, but not in any oie county, shall have a settlement in the county in which he has longest resided within such year. Every minor not emancipated and settled in his own right shall have the same settlement as the parent with whom he has last resided. The time during which a person has been an inmate of a hospital, poor house, jail, prison or other public institution and each month during which he has received relief from the poor fund of any county, shall be excluded in determining the time of residence hereunder.” And subsec 6 which reads: “Each residence when once legally acquired shall continue until it is lost or defeated by acquiring a new one in this state, or by voluntary absence from the county in which such residence had obtained for one year or more; and upon acquiring a new residence, or upon the happening of such voluntary absence, all former residence shall be defeated and lost, and the provisions of this section shall apply to cases of residence begun to be acquired or lost or defeated, as well as hereafter. Provided, that if within a year of such removal the county *36 of former residence shall contribute to the poor relief of such person in the county to which he or she shall have moved, such absence from the county of former residence shall not be construed to be voluntary as that term is used in this Act.”

The plaintiff Eddy County contends that the Johnsons were never voluntarily absent from Wells County for a continuous period of twelve months without receiving relief and therefore their residence for relief purposes remains in Wells County. The defendant Wells County contends that they were voluntarily absent from Wells County for nineteen months, that is, from May 1, 1932 to December 1, 1933, during all of which time they resided in Eddy County and received no relief excepting that provided by Eddy County for the months of November and December, 1932, and January, February and March 1933; that therefore they lost their residence for relief purposes in Wells County and acquired such a residence in Eddy County. Thus the points of difference are as to whether the Johnsons, under the statutory provisions quoted above, were voluntarily absent from Wells County from May 1932, when they ceased to receive relief from Wells County, until December 1933, when they, for the second time, received relief from Eddy County, and whether during such time they were continuously resident in Eddy County. The determining question is, does the fact that they received relief from Eddy County during five of the intervening months break the continuity of their voluntary absence from Wells County and of their residence in Eddy County. In other words, must the twelve months’ absence and the twelve months’ residence to be voluntary in the one case and continuous in the other as those terms are used in the statute, be twelve consecutive months without receiving relief from any source? If sd, the plaintiff must prevail. If not, then judgment must be for the defendant.

This question has never been directly passed upon by this court since the enactment of chapter 97, Session Laws 1933. But we think the logic of the following relief cases points the certain way to the answer. See Host v. Sheridan County, 46 ND 75, 179 NW 703; Burke County v. Oakland, 56 ND 343, 217 NW 643; Burke County v. Brusven, 62 ND 1, 241 NW 82; Enderlin v. Pontiac Twp. 62 ND 105, 242 NW 117; Griggs County v. Cass County, 65 ND 608, 260 NW 417; Nelson *37 County v. Williams County, 68 ND 56, 276 NW 265; Eddy County v. Wells County, 68 ND 394, 280 NW 667; Stutsman County v. Bowman County, 68 ND 699, 283 NW 179.

Chapter 97, Session Laws 1933, is a comprehensive statute providing for the administration of poor relief. Its several sections must, of course, be read and construed together and inconsistencies and repugnancies real or apparent, reconciled so far as it is possible to do so. Considering subsecs 4 and 6 of § 4 of this statute, it is clear that subsec 4 is primarily concerned with the gaining of a residence for poor relief, while subsec 6 is concerned with the losing of such residence. These sections are subsecs 4 and 6 of § 2501, Comp. Laws 1913, with additions in the way of amendments. The substance of the amended subsec 4, so far as it is pertinent in the instant case, is practically the same as that of the original provision in § 2501, Comp. Laws 1913. The amended subsec 6 is, in most respects, the same as the original subsec 6 in § 2501, Comp. Laws 1913, the only material change being the addition of the proviso that “if within a year of such removal the county of former residence shall contribute to the poor relief of such person in the county to which he or she shall have moved, such absence from the county of former residence shall not be construed to be voluntary as that term is used in this Act.”

In Griggs County v. Cass County, 65 ND 608, 260 NW 417, supra, considering subsecs 4 and 6 supra, we held that a person who moves from one county to another does not acquire residence for poor relief purposes in the county to which he moves unless and until he loses his residence in the county from which he moved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.W.2d 60, 73 N.D. 33, 1943 N.D. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddy-county-v-wells-county-nd-1943.