In Re Raseman Estate

170 N.W.2d 503, 18 Mich. App. 91
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 1969
Docket4,932
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 170 N.W.2d 503 (In Re Raseman Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Raseman Estate, 170 N.W.2d 503, 18 Mich. App. 91 (Mich. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

18 Mich. App. 91 (1969)
170 N.W.2d 503

In re RASEMAN ESTATE
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY
v.
RASEMAN

Docket No. 4,932.

Michigan Court of Appeals.

Decided June 25, 1969.
Rehearing denied August 7, 1969.
Application for leave to appeal filed August 29, 1969.

Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Robert A. Derengoski, Solicitor General, and William D. Dexter, Richard R. Roesch, and James B. Saunders, Assistant Attorneys General, for plaintiff.

Richard K. Uhl, for defendant.

*94 Before: LESINSKI, C.J., and HOLBROOK and LEVIN, JJ.

HOLBROOK, J.

This is an action involving the liability of the estate of Carl H. Raseman to the State of Michigan for the claimed unpaid balance of the cost of the maintenance of Robert D. Raseman, an insane person, committed to the Ypsilanti State Hospital.

The parties have stipulated to the facts presented on appeal: On November 24, 1944, Robert D. Raseman, age 21, was adjudicated insane and committed to the Ypsilanti State Hospital by the Wayne County probate court acting upon a petition presented by Carl H. Raseman, Robert's father. The order of commitment stated that Robert D. Raseman was to be a "full-pay patient" and that "the estate of said patient and Carl H. Raseman, father of said patient, be and are ordered to pay 100% of the cost of maintenance of said Robert D. Raseman." The order of commitment was never modified or revoked by the probate court.

Carl H. Raseman made periodic payments totaling $4,144.17 on the hospital account, paying it in full through October, 1948. On September 11, 1964, the State of Michigan caused a citation to be issued out of the Wayne county probate court, directing Carl H. Raseman to show cause relative to his failure to comply with the court order of 1944. Thereupon Mr. Raseman filed a petition to modify the support order in the probate court in November, 1964. The show-cause citation was not heard due to Mr. Raseman's death on December 10, 1964.

A claim in the amount of $17,540.11 representing the unpaid balance of the cost of the maintenance of Robert D. Raseman while confined to Ypsilanti State Hospital covering a period of commitment *95 from November 1, 1948, to December 10, 1964, was filed against the estate of Carl H. Raseman by the State of Michigan. The administrator of the estate objected to the claim and it was referred to a referee. On January 11, 1967, the referee issued an opinion and recommendation holding the claim valid. The Wayne county probate court entered an order on February 1, 1967, approving the claim.

Appeal was made by the administrator of the estate to the circuit court of Wayne county. A written opinion was filed by that court on December 6, 1967, holding the reimbursement provision of PA 1923, No 151,[1] unconstitutional. An order of judgment was filed on January 5, 1968, wherein the order of the probate court was overruled and the claim of the State of Michigan filed in the estate of Carl H. Raseman held for naught.

Claim of appeal from the order of judgment of the Wayne county circuit court was filed by the State of Michigan on January 11, 1968. There are only 2 issues properly presented on appeal and they are dealt with in order.

1. Does the reimbursement provision of PA 1923, No 151, as amended before December 10, 1964, violate art 11, § 15 of the Michigan Constitution of 1908?

The reimbursement provision in question as applicable in the instant case, PA 1963, No 52 (Stat Ann 1965 Cum Supp § 14.811) provides:

"If the relatives or friends of such mentally diseased person shall so request, or if on investigation at the time of the order for care, custody and treatment or at any time subsequent thereto, it shall appear that such mentally diseased person has means of property sufficient for the payment of his care *96 and maintenance, or if those persons legally liable under § 2 of chapter 1 of Act No 146 of the Public Acts of 1925, as amended, being § 401.2 of the Compiled Laws of 1948, or of this act for the care and maintenance of such mentally diseased person, have sufficient means for that purpose, the court shall order his admission as a full-pay patient, or partial-pay patient, to any hospital, home or institution for the care or treatment of the mentally ill, mentally handicapped or epileptic in this state, and shall specify the amount which the estate of such mentally diseased person, or those persons personally liable for the care and maintenance of such mentally diseased person shall pay for care and maintenance of such mentally diseased person in such state institution, and the amount so stated shall be subject to collection the same as any other moneys due the state are collected. The patient, husband, wife, father, mother, grandfather, grandmother and children of any age, being of sufficient ability, shall jointly and severally be liable for the care and maintenance of any patient. No divorce shall operate to relieve the spouse of a patient from this liability for such care and maintenance, unless the court shall specifically so order."

The stated issue asks whether the reimbursement provision violates art 11, § 15 of the Michigan Constitution of 1908, which reads:

"Institutions for the benefit of those inhabitants who are deaf, dumb, blind, feeble-minded or insane shall always be fostered and supported."

It is plaintiff's contention that there is no basis for the view that the named institutions are to be financed totally by the public through taxation. It argues that because there is no mandate requiring total public financial responsibility for the costs of the care and maintenance of persons committed *97 to the named institutions, the reimbursement provision is consistent with the constitutional provision.

Defendant asserts the reimbursement provision to be unconstitutional because it attempts to shift the burden of support from the public to the patient or family relatives.

Two similar constitutional provisions, Ohio[2] and Kansas[3] have been interpreted in the following 2 cases: The State v. Kiesewetter (1882), 37 Ohio St 546 and Kaiser v. The State of Kansas (1909), 80 Kan 364 (102 P 454).

In The State v. Kiesewetter, supra, p 549, it is stated:

"2. It is also claimed that this construction of the statute brings it in conflict with section 1, article 7 of the constitution, which declares that `institutions for the benefit of the insane, blind, deaf and dumb, shall always be fostered and supported by the state; and be subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by the general assembly.'

"The answer to this objection is that the provision of the constitution is not self executing, and that the mode in which such institutions are to be fostered and supported is left to the discretion of the general assembly. That discretion has been exercised in the passage of the statute now under consideration." (Emphasis supplied.)

In Kaiser v. The State of Kansas, supra, it was noted that the constitutional provision was copied *98 from the Ohio constitution and dealt with the provision in the same manner.

We do not read our constitutional provision as mandating the legislature to provide for the cost of maintaining institutionalized patients at the sole expense of the State in addition to fostering and supporting such institutions.

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170 N.W.2d 503, 18 Mich. App. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-raseman-estate-michctapp-1969.