Ladd & Bush v. Siegmund

57 P.2d 395, 153 Or. 471, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 125
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 395 (Ladd & Bush v. Siegmund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladd & Bush v. Siegmund, 57 P.2d 395, 153 Or. 471, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 125 (Or. 1936).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is an original proceeding in mandamus instituted by Ladd & Bush, Bankers, a cor *472 poration, as plaintiff, against John • C. Siegmund, county judge, and Roy S. Melson and LeRoy Hewlett, county commissioners, constituting the county court of Marion county, and U. G. Boyer, county clerk of Marion county, to require them, to draw, issue and deliver to the plaintiff a warrant of Marion county, Oregon, directing the treasurer of said county to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $1,122.44 in settlement of an account stated in favor of the state relief committee, representing one-fourth of the amount paid by said committee in old-age assistance to residents of Marion county, and assigned to the plaintiff, or to show cause, on-or before a designated date, for not so doing.

The alternative writ sets forth that both the state relief committee and the county relief committee were at all the times mentioned in the writ, and now are, duly appointed, qualified, organized and acting bodies under and pursuant to the provisions of chapter 55, Oregon Laws, Special Session, 1935; that pursuant to chapter 407, Oregon Laws 1935, “the state relief committee has adopted a rule and regulation and furnished the same to the several county relief committees as a part of the procedure for the furnishing of old-age assistance to persons, thereto entitled by law in the state of Oregon, whereby the county relief committee of each county is required to submit each month to the state relief committee the list of persons entitled to old-age assistance in the county, as hereinafter set forth;” and that the rules so adopted provide that the state relief committee shall proceed to make payments to each of the persons named in such list in the respective amounts set forth therein, and render a statement of account to the county from which such list is received, showing the county indebted to the state relief com *473 mittee for one-fourth the total amount paid to all such persons named therein, for the month covered by such statement.

The writ further states that on or about March 31, 1936, the Marion county relief committee and the county court of Marion county certified to the state relief committee a list of persons residing in Marion county eligible to receive old-age assistance under said chapter 407 and the United States social security act, which said list set forth the amount to be received by each of said persons as fixed and determined by the county relief committee, the total of said amounts being $4,489.75; that the state relief committee passed upon and approved said application and made payment to the several persons named in said list of the amounts set opposite their respective names, in the total sum above mentioned; that such list so submitted to the state relief committee was intended to and did constitute an application to the state relief committee for old-age assistance to each of the persons therein named; that after making said payments the state relief committee rendered a statement to the county court of Marion county for payment to the state relief committee of one-fourth the total amount of said payments, to wit, $1,122.44, payment of which by the said county court has been refused; and that the said claim against the county court for the payment of said amount of money has, by the state relief committee, been assigned to the plaintiff.

To this alternative writ the defendants have demurred on the ground that the facts therein stated “do not constitute grounds for suit and are insufficient to authorize the issuance of said alternative writ of mandamus or to require the defendants to do or perform *474 the act and thing in said writ commanded and directed”.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that the state relief committee has, under chapter 407, supra, authority to make the rules and regulations referred to in the alternative writ; that pursuant to such law and the rules and regulations so made, it became the duty of said state relief committee to make disbursements or payments directly to those entitled to old-age assistance; and that upon its making such payments it became the duty of the county court to cause warrants to be issued by the county clerk to reimburse the state relief committee.

The defendants, in resisting the plaintiff’s claim, assert that the money raised by the county for old-age assistance should be disbursed by the county relief committee to those entitled to such assistance; and that the law contemplates that the state relief committee shall allocate and pay to the county, to be disbursed by the county relief committee, the amounts made available through appropriation by the state legislature and by the federal government under the social security act.

In approaching a solution of the question here presented it is of some assistance to refer to and review briefly the state legislation concerning old-age assistance and other relief to the needy. The legislature in 1933 enacted chapter 15, Oregon Laws 1933, with purpose expressed in the title thereof as follows: “To relieve the people of the state [of Oregon] from hardships and suffering caused by unemployment. ’ ’ This act created both a state relief committee and a county relief committee for each county and prescribed the duties and separate authority of such committees. By this legislation no mention was made of old-age pensions or old-age assistance. Later in the saíne session *475 there was enacted chapter 284, Oregon Laws 1933, providing for “an old-age pension” and the éstabíishihent in each county of the state of a county old-age pension board, designated in said act as an “old-age pension commission”. The board of county commissioners of Multnomah county and the respective county eourts of the other counties of the state were designated as the old-age pension commissions of their respective counties, the members thereof to serve without compensation.

The 1935 legislative assembly enacted chapter 407, Oregon Laws 1935, in anticipation of the enactment by Congress of a social security law. This chapter specifies that its provisions “shall become operative when there is made available by the United States government or by its agency” a fund for old-age assistance to residents of this state. This enactment also repealed chapter 284, Oregon Laws 1933, and the duty of carrying out the provisions of chapter 407, supra, was conferred upon the state relief committee and the county relief committees ‘ ‘ as created by chapter 15, Oregon Laws 1933”.

On August 14, 1935, Congress passed the social security act, U. S. C. A., title 42, chapter 7. Section 302 of this act provides in part as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Multnomah County v. Luihn
178 P.2d 159 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1947)
State Ex Rel. Wilson v. Weir
79 P.2d 305 (Montana Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 395, 153 Or. 471, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-bush-v-siegmund-or-1936.