Huber v. Hennepin County Welfare Board

83 N.W.2d 511, 249 Minn. 561, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 601
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 24, 1957
DocketNo. 36,998
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 N.W.2d 511 (Huber v. Hennepin County Welfare Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huber v. Hennepin County Welfare Board, 83 N.W.2d 511, 249 Minn. 561, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 601 (Mich. 1957).

Opinions

Knutson, Justice).

Certiorari to review a decision of the Industrial Commission awarding compensation to respondent.

Mrs. Clara Birmingham has been a recipient of old-age assistance since 1936 or 1938. Respondent, Elizabeth Huber, had been a friend of Mrs. Birmingham for some 30 years. They worked together in lodges in which they were mutually interested, and Mrs. Huber had often visited at Mrs. Birmingham’s home. In 1952, Mrs. Birmingham became ill, and Mrs. Huber began calling on her two or three times a week to assist her in various ways. For such services she was paid small amounts by Mrs. Birmingham from time to time. In July or August 1952, a case worker for the Hennepin County Welfare Board, in making a routine call at the home of Mrs. Birmingham in connection with her old-age assistance, found Mrs. Huber there and then, for the first time, was informed that Mrs. Huber had been assisting Mrs. Birmingham and that Mrs. Birmingham had been paying her out of her own money. The two women were then informed that, if a doctor’s recommendation could be obtained, the welfare board could make an allowance to Mrs. Birmingham for practical nursing care and could also reimburse the recipient of old-age assistance for the money she had personally paid out for such care up to that time. Thereafter, a doctor’s recommendation was procured, and the welfare board increased the old-age assistance grant of Mrs. Birmingham from $60 per month to $112.50 per month, of which sum $82.50 was a grant for nursing care. At the request of Mrs. Huber, this amount was paid directly to her by the welfare board, but the grant was charged to the old-age assistance account of Mrs. Birmingham and the checks issued bore her account number. Respondent was paid this amount for the months of September, October, and November 1952. During the early part of December 1952, Mrs. Birmingham went to California, returning during the late part of December. During her absence and from December 1, 1952, until December 1, 1953, nothing was paid for nursing care. [563]*563Late in 1953, Mrs. Huber was paid on a per diem basis at the rate of two dollars per day pins transportation. She was so paid for the intervals from December 1 to 5; December 7 to 11; December 14 to 19; December 21 to 24; December 28 to 31; and from January 4 to 15; January 18 to 22; and on January 25, all in 1954.

Periodic calls were made by a case worker on recipients of old-age assistance, and in this case, among other things, they checked to see if Mrs. Huber was performing the services for which she was paid. The executive secretary of the welfare board testified that, if they had found that respondent was not doing what the doctors required of her, the welfare board would have ceased making the payments they had allotted to Mrs. Birmingham for such services. In that event, Mrs. Birmingham either could procure someone else to serve her or she could make whatever arrangements she wanted to make for respondent’s services and pay for them herself. The testimony of the executive secretary of the welfare board in that respect was as follows:

“Q. And assuming the situation where the practical nurse was not taking care of the recipient properly, would the worked than [sic] require her to be discharged?
“A. No, that would be up to the recipient. We couldn’t require anybody to discharge.
“Q. Would you continue to make payment to an inefficient practical nurse?
“A. I think that we would, upon the worker calling in the home. The main problem, the main criterion that we go by is the medical condition of the patient, and in all these cases — I mean, conferring is done with the physician on the case.
“Q. Supposing the physician, upon requiring them certain medication to be given to the recipient, finds that the medications are not given, the proper food is not made for the patient, and he informs the social worker in the case that the practical nurse should be discharged, would you continue to make payments under those circumstances ?
[564]*564“A. No. If the doctor advises that these injections and so forth as you mentioned were not being given properly, we would advise the recipient that since the doctor indicated that the service was no longer being received, we would no longer continue to pay. I mean, as far as if he or she wanted to keep this person with them, they could make any arrangement they wanted to.
“Q. But you would cease making payments, — isn’t that true?
“A. That is right. Or if the doctor indicated that the care was no longer necessary.”
A former case worker of the welfare board testified with respect to the type of supervision given as follows:
“A. Well, nursing care was according to what a doctor ordered, and we were to see that that care was carried out.
“Q. You supervised and saw to it that the care that the doctor ordered was carried out?
“A. Yes.
“Q. And as such, when you came into the home, you determined what care was given?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And you checked that against the doctor’s orders ?
“A. Yes, sir.
* * * •:* #
“Q. Supposing Mrs. Birmingham refused to change and the doctor said that the care was not sufficient and that it is detrimental, what would you do in that case?
“A. Well, if the care wasn’t being given that was supposed to be given,—
“Q. You would terminate?
“A. You couldn’t pay for it.”

On January 25, 1954, while Mrs. Huber was caring for Mrs. Birmingham, she fell and received certain injuries for which she filed a claim petition seeking benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act against the Hennepin County Welfare Board. The Industrial Commission, by a divided decision, awarded her compensation. The [565]*565only question before us is whether, at the time Mrs. Huber sustained such injuries, she was an employee of the Hennepin County Welfare Board within the meaning of our Workmen’s Compensation Act.

The origin and development of our state Department of Public Welfare, under which the county welfare board operates, are sufficiently set forth in State ex rel. Hennepin County Welfare Board v. Fitzsimmons, 239 Minn. 407, 58 N. W. (2d) 882. In Hennepin County, the board of county commissioners constitutes the county welfare board.1 While the personnel of the two boards are the same, the powers, duties, and authority of the county welfare board are governed by the law pertaining to social welfare.2 In order to conform our state law to the Federal Social Security Act,3 the county welfare boards operate pursuant to rules and regulations, having the force of law, established by the commissioner of public welfare. M. S. A. 393.07, subd. 3, reads in part:

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.W.2d 511, 249 Minn. 561, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-hennepin-county-welfare-board-minn-1957.