Jones v. Cooney

263 P. 429, 81 Mont. 340, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 119
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1928
DocketNo. 6,270.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 263 P. 429 (Jones v. Cooney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Cooney, 263 P. 429, 81 Mont. 340, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 119 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff, who is a resident, citizen and taxpayer of Lewis and Clark county, against the board of county commissioners 'of that county, and the defendants, who constitute the board. In his complaint the plaintiff alleges that the defendants are paying out and dispensing public money for the care and maintenance of the poor of Lewis and Clark county in a manner and for a purpose not authorized by law, asking that a restraining order be issued prohibiting them from so doing. The court sustained a demurrer to the complaint and directed that the action be dismissed, upon which order judgment was entered, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

The facts, admitted by the demurrer, are that Lewis and Clark county owns and conducts a county poor-farm with suitable buildings to care for about 100 sick, poor and infirm male or female adults. The poorhouse or poor-farm is *342 supervised by a superintendent working under1 tbe directions of the board of eounty commissioners; sixty-live adults are cared for at the poorhouse, although there is room for approximately ten additional adult females and twenty additional adult males. There are no accommodations at the place for children and it seems unwise from the standpoint of morals, environment and education to commit minor children to the poor-farm; at least that is the settled policy of the eounty commissioners, against which criticism has not been directed. There are in the county more than 100 male and female adults and minors applying for and entitled to relief under the head of persons who are indigent, sick and infirm, over and above the number that may be accommodated at the poor-farm when it is filled to capacity. To these persons the board has been granting aid in the shape of fuel, groceries, clothing, and in some cases when required small doles of money, at their respective places of residence in the eounty, without committing or attempting to commit such persons to the poor-farm. The commissioners of Lewis and Clark county have been following this course for many years.

Illustrative cases are: (1) An aged man residing in a cabin on the Rocky Mountain divide near Austin who is unable to perform manual labor requisite to a livelihood, he being without relatives, property or income. (2) A woman with three children of tender years who require the presence at home of their mother, the woman being without property, income or relatives; and unless food, fuel and clothing is furnished to the woman and her children, each and all of them will become destitute. (3) A man and woman with five minor children, residing in the Helena valley, the husband being sick and infirm, three of the children being now ill with typhoid fever; the family being without income or means of livelihood, or the most rudimentary provisions for relief, warmth and life, and unless aid is furnished by the county or some charitable institution the family will become destitute. (4) A woman and four children residing in the sixth ward of the city of *343 Helena, the woman’s husband being at the present time confined to the county hospital of Lewis and Clark county, heretofore having been confined in the state hospital for the insane at Warm Springs. The family has no relatives except as stated, and unless food, clothing and fuel is furnished they will be in danger of starvation and death.

Each and all of these persons are bona fide residents of Lewis and Clark county, and the commissioners claim that these indigent persons, and others similarly situated, can be maintained and cared for as public charges at their respective places of abode for one-half the cost and expense which would be incurred by maintaining and caring for them at the county poor-farm or hospital.

It is alleged that in addition to the persons named, the defendants are granting, allowing and furnishing to, and will, unless restrained by the court, continue to grant, allow and furnish food, clothing and fuel at the expense of the poor fund, to more than 100 male and female adults and minors in Lewis and Clark county, over and above the number that may be accommodated at said county poor-farm or hospital, or the number of persons entitled to and receiving old age pensions from said county under the provisions of the Old Age Pension Act. The plaintiff alleges that whatever may be the wisdom of the method pursued by the commissioners, the statutes of the state provide the sole grant or authority to those officers and the statutes require that the poor of Lewis and Clark county be confined at the poorhouse and when that is filled to capacity, no further or other aid can be extended out of,the poor fund.

The care of the state for its dependent classes is considered by all enlightened people as a measure of its civilization (21 R. C. L. 701), and provision for the proper care and treatment at public expense of the indigent sick, and of those who for other reasons are unable to take care of themselves is said to be among the unquestioned objects of public duty. (State *344 ex rel. Griffith v. Osawhee Township, 14 Kan. 418, 19 Am. Rep. 99; 20 Cal. Jur. 880.)

The people of Montana gave recognition to this high moral obligation when they wrote into our Constitution section 5 of Article X, which provides: “The several counties of the state shall provide as may be prescribed by law for those inhabitants, who, by reason of age, infirmity or misfortune, may have claims upon the sympathy and aid of society.” As this constitutional declaration is not self-executing the measure of relief which may be furnished necessarily depends upon statutes enacted to carry out the benevolent purpose expressed.

As will appear presently, the statutes upon the subject are not in complete harmony, but we think the legislative intention may be found with reasonable certainty.

The First Legislative Assembly passed an Act relating to the support of the poor. (Bannack Laws, p. 457.) The first section of the Act vested the county commissioners of the several counties “with entire and exclusive superintendence of the poor,” and without material alteration that declaration has been carried forward continuously to the present time; it now appears as section 4521, Revised Codes 1921. Section 2 of the Bannack Act has likewise been carried forward substantially. It now appears as section 4522, Revised Codes 1921, and provides, inter alia, that every person without means, who is unable to earn a livelihood in consequence of bodily infirmity, idiocy, lunacy or other cause, must be supported by designated relatives, “if they, or either of them, be of sufficient ability, in the order named.” In 1876 an addition was made, — provided the indigent person had not come to his deplorable state from intemperance or other vice. (Laws Mont. 1876, p. 52.) This proviso has been continued and appears as section 4523, Revised Codes 1921.

Another provision of the Bannack Act, section 4, was the forerunner .of section 4524, Revised Codes 1921, which reads: “"When such person does not have the relatives mentioned in section 4522 of this Code, in any county, or such relatives are *345

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Bluebook (online)
263 P. 429, 81 Mont. 340, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-cooney-mont-1928.