Inhabitants of Minot v. Inhabitants of Bowdoin

75 Me. 205, 1883 Me. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 24, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Me. 205 (Inhabitants of Minot v. Inhabitants of Bowdoin) 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 Minot v. Inhabitants of Bowdoin, 75 Me. 205, 1883 Me. LEXIS 110 (Me. 1883).

Opinion

Appleton, C. J.

This is a suit to recover for supplies furnished Eunice Hawkes and her infant child. While Eunice was residing in Webster, she became pregnant, and after the birth of her child she married Frank W. Hawkes, the father, whose settlement was then in the plaintiff town, while that of the mother was in the defendant town. While Eunice was residing in Webster and receiving supplies there as a pauper, the overseers of the poor of Minot, being advised of the marriage, removed the pauper and her child to their town. Subsequently and after [207]*207such removal, the paupers continuing and being in distress supplies were furnished them by the plaintiffs, due notice thereof given the defendants, and this suit was brought to recover compensation for the supplies thus furnished.

The question involved was whether the marriage of Eunice Hawkes was procured to change her settlement by the agency and collusion of the officers of Bowdoiii, where her settlement was before such marriage. The jury by their verdict found that it was so procured.

The case comes before us on motions for a new trial and exceptions to the rulings of the presiding justice.

I. It is urged that the verdict should be set aside as against the weight of the evidence. We think otherwise. There was unquestionably evidence tending to establish the fact of a collusive marriage through the agency of the officers of Bowdoin for the purpose of changing the settlement of the pauper. The force and effect of the testimony was to be weighed and determined by the jury. Their conclusion is in accordance with the weight of the testimony rather than adverse thereto. No reason on this account exists for disturbing it.

H. The defendants insist that the verdict.be set aside because a juror, who sat on the triakof this cause, had a brother who was then a resident and tax-payer in the plaintiff town.

The defendants had by virtue of R. S., c. 82, § 72, a right to examine any juror on oath to ascertain whether he was related to either party, had given or formed any opinion or was sensible of any bias, prejudice of particular interest'in the cause.

This they neglected to do. They should have made the necessary inquiries to ascertain whether the jurors could impartially try the cause, before the trial commenced and delay their investigation till after the rendition of the verdict. The party thus remiss is not entitled to a new trial as matter of right, though it may be ordered as a matter of discretion. McLellan v. Crofton, 6 Greenl. 307; Woodward v. Dean, 113 Mass. 297: Tilton v. Kimball, 52 Maine, 500.

Further, a party seeking a new trial by reason of interest in a juror should negative such knowledge on his part as well as [208]*208that of his counsel. Jameson v. Androscoggin R. R. Co. 52 Maine, 412; Russell v. Quinn, 114 Mass. 103; Smith v. Earle, 118 Mass. 531. Here the affidavit fails to negative knowledge on the part of counsel for the defendants. And the officers of the town might have been aware of the fact for aught that is very clearly disclosed in the affidavit of counsel.

It is not necessary to consider, whether, if the question were properly before us, a verdict should be set aside because one of the jurors was a cousin or brother to one of the inhabitants of a litigant town.

HI. The presiding justice was requested to give this instruction : that, "if the jury believe from the evidence and under the instructions of the court, that the paupers, or either of them, had their lawful settlement in Bowdoin from the beginning and so remained, and that either or both of them was or were removed by the town of Minot, while she or they were or was in distress and in need of relief and so continued at and after such removal, and the town of Minot continually held them and provided for them, even then the plaintiffs cannot recover.”-

This request was general in its language. It was properly refused. The purport of the request is that if the officers of a town should remove a pauper in distress and being relieved in a town other than his settlement, the town so removing could not have a right of action for supplies duly furnished such pauper after his removal, against the town where the settlement of the pauper in fact was.

That the town so removing, the pauper having no settlement therein, could not sustain an action for expenses paid the town from which the pauper was removed, against the town in which the pauper had his settlement, is very clear. One town cannot make another liable by voluntarily assuming the payment of pauper supplies for which it was not liable, though such other town might have been and was bound to pay the town furnishing such supplies. One town cannot pay for supplies furnished a pauper by a town not liable for the support of such pauper and maintain an action for the same against the town which is liable. The jury were so instructed and properly.

[209]*209IV. The paupers removed and being in distress and in need of relief after their removal, the overseers of the town of Minot were bound to furnish such relief as the exigency of their needs might require. It matters not how the paupers happened to be there; whether by mistake of fact or of law on the part of the overseers of the poor by whom their removal was effected. They might be illegally brought in a town contrary to the provisions of It. 3., c. 24, § 38. But howsoever in the town and in distress, they are in the town, found in the town, and the law does not stop to inquire as to the mode or manner of their coming or by whom brought. It commands relief.

The paupers being in distress and relieved, the town relieving such distress has by the express terms of the statute, after following its requirements, to recover of the town in which the pauper relieved has his settlement, compensation for the supplies thus furnished. No question can be raised as to how or why the pauper happened to be in the town by which he is relieved. The conditions required for the maintenance of the action exist and plaintiffs must recover.

V. The presiding judge after alluding to the situation of Hawkes, who was arrested under the bastardy process, and to that of the mother of the illegitimate child, and of the motives and influences operating upon them and inducing marriage, added that so far as these were effective upon the minds of the parties without action by the defendant town, it would not be chargeable with the results arising from those causes. " But, ” he added, " if a municipal officer of the town made use of the facts of the situation, either by way of advice, argument, persuasion or inducement, made use of any means to induce the marriage for the purpose of changing the settlement, in such a sense that but for such act of the municipal officer, the marriage would not have taken place, if such a state of facts is shown, then the marriage was procured by agency of the municipal officer to change the settlement.”

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Related

Woodward v. Dean
113 Mass. 297 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Russell v. Quinn
114 Mass. 103 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Smith v. Earle
118 Mass. 531 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
75 Me. 205, 1883 Me. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-minot-v-inhabitants-of-bowdoin-me-1883.