In Re Settlement of Rutland

10 N.W.2d 365, 215 Minn. 361
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 11, 1943
DocketNo. 33,444.
StatusPublished

This text of 10 N.W.2d 365 (In Re Settlement of Rutland) 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
In Re Settlement of Rutland, 10 N.W.2d 365, 215 Minn. 361 (Mich. 1943).

Opinions

1 Reported in 10 N.W.2d 365. The township of Whitefield, a political subdivision of Kandiyohi county, appeals from a judgment of the district court of Hennepin county determining that said township is the place of the poor relief settlement of one Agnes Rutland and her two minor children, adjudging said township legally responsible for their support, and ordering their removal from the city of Minneapolis to said township.

Appellant contends that respondent, the city of Minneapolis, is responsible for their support under the facts and circumstances herein stated. Both municipalities have the town system of poor relief.

Agnes Rutland, under her maiden name of Agnes Olson, resided in Minnesota between July 1934 and the date of her marriage to Phillip Rutland on May 7, 1936, and gained a poor relief settlement in the township of Whitefield, Kandiyohi county, pursuant to Mason St. 1927, § 3161. Phillip Rutland was unsettled at the time of their marriage and has not established a poor relief settlement in this state at any time subsequent thereto. There are two minor children, the issue of this marriage, Kenneth, born April 26, 1938, and a second child, born in September or October 1941. Both reside with their mother. Immediately following their marriage, the parties resided in Highland Park, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois, from May 11, 1936, to January 6, 1937, when they returned to Minneapolis and, upon their joint application, received relief from the city of Minneapolis, in the first instance on January 29, 1937. From this date on Agnes Rutland and her children have resided in *Page 363 Minneapolis, except for six months' residence in Sherburne county in 1937 and six months in Roseau county in 1940. After January 1937 the domestic life of the parties was very unstable, and they have been the recipients of continuous relief from the city of Minneapolis substantially all of the time from January 29, 1937, to the bringing of this action. Prior to February 28, 1940, they lived together intermittently in Minneapolis. From that date, when the husband seems to have abandoned his wife and family, he remained apart from them, with the exception of December 1940. From February 12, 1941, to April 11, 1941, he was an inmate of the Hennepin county jail, and from April 11, 1941, to April 30, 1942, when this action was commenced, he has been an inmate of the federal reformatory at Sandstone. Although separated most of this time, the Rutlands have never been divorced.

Appellant's numerous assignments of error present two issues for consideration on this appeal, viz.:

(1) That the court erred in determining the poor relief settlement of Agnes Rutland to be in the township of Whitefield.

(2) That it was error for the trial court to order her removal and that of her children to the township of Whitefield, because it involved a separation of the family and was against public policy.

1. Appellant concedes that the settlement of Agnes Rutland at the time of her marriage on May 7, 1936, was the township of Whitefield, and further, that at the time of marriage Phillip Rutland had not established a poor relief settlement in this state, nor has he acquired one since that date. Despite this, appellant urges that upon her marriage the maiden relief settlement of Agnes was lost or at least suspended during coverture.

It is well settled here and elsewhere that the situs of the husband's settlement becomes that of his wife for poor relief purposes and that she takes from him by derivation. City of Willmar v. Village of Spicer, 129 Minn. 395, 152 N.W. 767; 48 C. J., Paupers, pp. 480, 481, § 111, and pp. 487, 488, § 127, and cases there cited. If, however, at the time of marriage the husband is unsettled and *Page 364 the wife is settled, the wife retains her maiden settlement until such time as the husband acquires a settlement which can devolve upon her by derivation. Town of Windham v. Town of Lebanon, 51 Conn. 319; Inhabitants of Winslow v. Inhabitants of Pittsfield, 95 Me. 53, 49 A. 46; Treasurer Rec'r Gen. v. City of Boston, 229 Mass. 83, 118 N.E. 284; 48 C. J., Paupers, p. 488, § 127, and cases there cited. Substantially this same rule was embodied in the statutory law of this state by L. 1864, c. 16, § 2. R. L. 1905, § 1488, however, omitted the provision, and it has not since been reënacted. This omission, under the particular circumstances here, indicates an intention to follow the common-law rule, and the reasons therefor were clearly explained in City of Willmar v. Village of Spicer,supra. Appellant relies upon the Spicer case, but there the husband had a settlement. Therefore, it does not sustain appellant's position here, where the husband was at all times unsettled. We follow the universally accepted rule that where the husband has no settlement at marriage his wife retains her maiden settlement until such time as he acquires a settlement that she may take by derivation.

Minn. St. 1941, § 261.07 (Mason St. 1940 Supp. § 3161), expressly provides the conditions under which a settlement may be lost or terminated, viz., (1) by acquiring a new one in another state; (2) by voluntary and uninterrupted absence from this state for a period of one year with intent to abandon residence in this state. Under the facts here, Agnes Rutland did not gain a new legal settlement in another state, and her only absence from the state during the time here relevant was the brief period she resided in Highland Park, Illinois, which was short of the year which could have caused her loss of settlement under the second statutory provision. The trial court correctly found that Whitefield township was the place of Agnes Rutland's maiden settlement, which was neither lost nor suspended by reason of her marriage, nor was it terminated by virtue of the statutory provisions herein enumerated.

2. The order of the trial court removing Agnes Rutland and her children to Whitefield township is assailed on the ground that *Page 365 it tends directly to sever family ties and is against public policy. We concur wholeheartedly in the sound and well established rule that ordinarily families should not be separated, and that the home, which represents the very foundation of our social existence, should be protected and preserved by the courts. The opposition of the courts to the separation of families by removing wives from husbands or children from their parents is a universally accepted doctrine. Cascade Overseers v. Lewis Overseers, 148 Pa. 333, 23 A. 1003; Town of Peacham v. Town of Waterford, 46 Vt. 154; 48 C. J., Paupers, p. 495, § 145, and cases there cited. While the courts have been ever mindful of the moral necessity of maintaining domestic solidarity and have fully recognized the importance thereof, yet, where it appears that the husband has failed in his marital obligations and has not provided a proper home, they (the courts) have not hesitated to direct removal of the wife and children in cases where the facts and circumstances so justified. Thus it has been held that where a husband has abandoned or deserted his wife no moral or legal obstacle prevents the removal of the wife to the place of her maiden settlement. 48 C. J., Paupers, p.

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Related

In Re Settlement of Golden
234 N.W. 7 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)
Inhabitants of Winslow v. Inhabitants of Pittsfield
49 A. 46 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1901)
Cascade Overseers v. Lewis Overseers
23 A. 1003 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1892)
Treasurer & Receiver General v. City of Boston
229 Mass. 83 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1918)
Town of Bethel v. Town of Tunbridge
13 Vt. 445 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1841)
Town of Rupert v. Town of Winhall
29 Vt. 245 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1857)
Town of Wilmington v. Town of Jamaica
42 Vt. 694 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1870)
Town of Peacham v. Town of Waterford
46 Vt. 154 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1873)
Town of Windham v. Town of Lebanon
51 Conn. 319 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1883)
City of Willmar v. Village of Spicer
152 N.W. 767 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 365, 215 Minn. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-settlement-of-rutland-minn-1943.