Inhabitants of Islesborough v. Inhabitants of Lincolnville

76 Me. 572, 1885 Me. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 1, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 76 Me. 572 (Inhabitants of Islesborough v. Inhabitants of Lincolnville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inhabitants of Islesborough v. Inhabitants of Lincolnville, 76 Me. 572, 1885 Me. LEXIS 141 (Me. 1885).

Opinion

Postee, J.

The only question involved in this case relates to the settlement of Georgianna Ryder, and to recover pay for the amount of supplies furnished for her support’in the plaintiff town, this action is brought.

The pauper was born May 16, 1842, is non compos mentis, and the legitimate child of Thomas Ryder, whose settlement was in Islesborough, where he lived until April 15,1864, when he moved to Lincolnville, and has resided there since that time. Up to the time of his removal from Islesborough, he had never received any aid as a pauper for himself or any member of his family. This daughter had always lived in his family, and when he moved to Lincolnville, he took her with him. In 1864, shortly after the [574]*574removal to Lincolnville, the step-mother of the daughter, with the knowledge and consent of said Thomas Ryder, called for aid for the support of the alleged pauper, which was furnished by Islesborough continuously from that time till May 7, 1875, the daughter continuing to live in the family, at which time she was removed to said town of Islesborough, and has there been supported by that town ever since.

The pauper became of age May 16, 1868, and she then had the settlement of her father, which was in the plaintiff town. Has she, since she became of age, acquired a settlement in the defendant town?

We think not.

The plaintiffs contend that the pauper, being non compos mentis, takes the settlement of her father, and that he has gained a settlement in the defendant town by having his home therein for five successive years, notwithstanding the support furnished by the plaintiffs as pauper supplies to this daughter for more than eighteen years.

In support of this proposition it is not claimed on the part of the plaintiffs that the pauper has ever been emancipated, but that the supplies furnished the pauper have been so furnished as not to affect, directly or indirectly, the settlement of the father, they not being, in contemplation of law, supplies furnished to. him.

This proposition does not depend merely upon the statement of it for its soundness, but rather upon the legal as well as social relations which the father and child respectively bore towards each other, and the knowledge on his part of the necessity and furnishing of those supplies.

It has long been the settled law in this state that the furnishing of supplies to a minor child, not a member of the father’s family, and not under his care and protection, whether this absence and lack of care be on account of the child’s own fault or the neglect of the father and without his knowledge or consent, by a distant town where the child may happen to fall into distress, while the father has sufficient means and is willing to support the child in his own house, is not such furnishing of supplies to him as would prevent him from acquiring a settlement to which he would [575]*575otherwise be entitled. Eastport v. Lubec, 64 Maine, 246; Bangor v. Readfield, 32 Maine, 60.

In the case before us the pauper, though more than twenty-one years of age, was non compos mentis, and, in her legal relations pertaining to pauper settlements, would stand upon the same footing as if she had been a minor. Wiscasset v. Waldoborough, 3 Maine, 388; Croydon v. Sullivan, 47 N. H. 184; Tremont v. Mt. Desert, 36 Maine, 393 ; Monroe v. Jackson, 55 Maine, 58.

It therefore becomes necessary to understand the status of this non compos daughter in her relations to her father before and at the time the supplies were furnished to her.

She had continued to-reside in her father’s family, after arriving-at the age of twenty-one years, up to May 7, 1875, receiving-support from the plaintiff town the eleven years prior to that time and while living- with her father, and was then taken to the plaintiff town, as the evidence shows, that she might be supported at less expense and trouble to the town. It was with the father’s knowledge and consent that the supplies were called for in the first instance. He states that he called for assistance'from the town because he was not able to support her, and understood at the time she was removed, that she was to be supported by the town. It can not, therefore, be reasonably said that the father was ignorant of the fact that the supplies were furnished to his daughter during the time she was residing in his family, and that, after her removal, she was being supported as . a pauper in Islesborough.

Hence, we say that the supplies in this case cannot be considered as having been furnished without the knowledge of the father; and the removal of the pauper by the town officers and her maintenance in the town of her lawful settlement, on account of his inability tó support her, can not be regarded as an abandonment by him of his child, who, by reason of mental imbecility, is compelled to remain dependent upon him for her guidance and support. She was taken from him by operation of law, and not because he had abandoned her or she had abandoned him. " The parental and filial relations were not broken up, but suspended during the subjection of the children to the care of the overseers [576]*576oF the poor for their support.” Sanford v. Lebanon, 31 Maine, 128 ; Garland v. Dover, 19 Maine, 446; Tremont v. Mt. Desert, 36 Maine, 393. These relations did not cease to subsist by reason of the mental weakness of the child or of the poverty of the father. Had he been of sufficient ability he might have been compelled to provide support to this dependent child, or to pay the expenses incurred for her support. Even in cases of extreme destitution resulting in absolute pauperism of the parent and the binding out of the child to service by the overseers of the poor of the town where such child has a lawful settlement until it arrives at the age of twenty-one years, does not emancipate the child, nor necessarily break up those relations, though they are suspended during the continuance of such service. Should the child be discharged from its indenture and the parent become of sufficieht ability to furnish support to the child during its minority, the filial and parental relations would be reinstated and subsist as fully as if they had never been interrupted through poverty. Oldtown v. Falmouth, 40 Maine, 108; Hampden v. Troy, 70 Maine, 493.

Nor does it appear that the father ever intended to abandon this child, or consent to her emancipation. And without such consent, either express or implied, there can be no emancipation.. On the contrary, although his visits may not have been so frequent as to imply the deepest affection for his unfortunate child, yet the .fact that they were made, however prolonged may have been the length of time between them, is corroborative of that which is claimed by the défense — that there had never been any emancipation or abandonment of her by the father, and that the supplies thus furnished the daughter were supplies furnished indirectly to the father, and which prevented him from gaining a settlement in Lincolnville. .

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76 Me. 572, 1885 Me. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-islesborough-v-inhabitants-of-lincolnville-me-1885.