Mason v. Board of Managers of Michigan Soldiers' Home

148 N.W. 220, 181 Mich. 347, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 594
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1914
DocketDocket No. 150
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 N.W. 220 (Mason v. Board of Managers of Michigan Soldiers' Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason v. Board of Managers of Michigan Soldiers' Home, 148 N.W. 220, 181 Mich. 347, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 594 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Steere, J.

The ultimate question presented by this record is whether the board of managers of the Michigan soldiers’ home at Grand Rapids ever had the right to take and retain permanently all or any part of the pensions of inmates of that institution.

Defendants have appealed from a decree of the circuit court of Kent county, in chancery, awarding $8,373.14 to 126 of the 206 complainants, in sums ranging from $4.95 to a maximum of $541.86 (principal and interest), being pension money received by said complainants from the United States government while residents of said soldiers’ home, and retained by defendants under rules and general orders adopted and promulgated by said board of managers in cases where the individual pensions exceeded $12 per month.

The'original bill of complaint herein was filed September 4, 1909, by Orange S. Mason, since deceased, in his own behalf and that of others, to restrain enforcement of a general order promulgated by the defendant board of managers, requiring all inmates of said home to surrender all pension money received by them in excess of $12, or in exceptional cases $15, per month to the authorities of the institution, to be permanently retained and ultimately turned into the general State fund. Subsequently all parties who are' now complainants were made parties to said bill of complaint by an order of the court.

[350]*350Upon the filing of such bill a preliminary injunction was issued restraining the defendants from enforcing the provisions of said order. Defendants demurred to said bill, later amending said demurrer, alleging, among other reasons, that the suit instituted by complainants was in fact a suit against the State of Michigan, and therefore could not be maintained without the consent of the State; that said board of managers was an agency of the State, and defendants possessed only limited powers especially provided by law, not including the right to sue and be sued in the courts of the State of Michigan. Complainants’ bill was later amended, and a plea was filed by defendants to said amended bill, followed by a replication of complainants. Thereafter a stipulation between the parties provided that the suit should be brought on for hearing upon the bill of complaint and plea on a date fixed, at which time, by permission of the court, complainants’ replication was withdrawn, and an amended bill filed praying for an accounting by defendants for the moneys collected from complainants as alleged, and asking for an injunction restraining defendants from discharging any of complainants from said home until the further order of the court, from collecting or appropriating any money due complainants as pensioners of the civil war, from compelling them to sign receipts or transfers for any money due them as pensioners of the United States government, and from transferring or setting over any moneys received by defendants as aforesaid to the general fund of the State of Michigan. A plea was then filed by defendants to said amended bill fairly putting in issue all material questions raised by said amended bill and involved in this controversy, with a general denial of complainants’ right to the relief asked. A later replication filed by complainants finally concluded the protracted pleadings, and the [351]*351suit was brought to a hearing on March 4, 1913, upon pleadings and proofs taken in open court.

The trial court rendered an opinion that said board of managers of the Michigan soldiers’ home had no authority, under the law creating such institution, to make rules by which any part of the soldiers’ pensions received from the United States government could be permanently taken from the inmates of the home and appropriated by the board; the gist of said opinion being as follows:

“If soldiers, sailors, and marines come within that class which entitles them to the benefits of the home, they are entitled to the enjoyment of such benefits, without payment therefor. If not entitled to the benefits of the home, they should not be admitted. The State gave the board no authority to contract with those not eligible for admission to the home. It did not intend to give the board of managers any authority to deal with any except those entitled to the benefits of the home. It was not intended that the institution should be supported in any way by contributions from the pensioners.”

The Michigan soldiers’ home was established by Act No. 152, Pub. Acts 1885 (2 How. Stat. [2d Ed.] § 3716 et seq.); entitled:

“An act to authorize the establishment of a home for disabled soldiers, sailors, and marines in the State of Michigan.”

By section 2 of said act the general supervision and government of said soldiers’ home is vested in a board of managers consisting of six members appointed by the governor by and with the advice and consent of the senate. *

Section 8 provides:

“It shall be the duty of the board of managers to meet once m every three months, oh their own adjournment, and of tener if they shall deem it advisable, at which meeting they shall prepare and carefully digest and mature a system of government for said [352]*352home, embracing all such rules, regulations, and general laws as they may deem necessary for preserving order, for enforcing discipline, for preserving the health of such disabled soldiers, sailors, or marines as may be received at this home.”

Other parts of the act, of minor importance here, provide for the selection by said board of a treasurer and clerk from their own body and a commandant for said home, with such subordinate officers and employees as may be necessary. Provision is also made by subsequent legislation for establishing upon the same premises and under the same management a home for the wives and mothers of such disabled soldiers.

Section 11 of said act provides in part as follows:

“All honorably discharged soldiers, sailors and marines, who have served in the army or navy of the United States in the late War of the Rebellion [or in the Mexican War], and who are disabled by disease, wounds, or otherwise, and who have no adequate means of support, and by reason of such disability are incapable of earning their living, and who would be otherwise dependent upon public or private charity, shall be entitled to be admitted to said home, subject to the rules and regulations that shall be adopted by the board of managers to govern the admission of applicants to said home.”

This section also requires a previous residence of one year in the State, unless the applicant served in a Michigan regiment or was accredited to the State of Michigan, and subsequent amendments provide for the admission to said home of soldiers, sailors, and marines who have served in the Spanish-American or Philippine wars upon the same conditions.

This court, in construing the law creating the soldiers’ home, has defined it as an eleemosynary institution ; the purpose of its existence being to dispense to a favored but dependent class a well-bestowed and [353]*353deserving charity. The language of the act admits of no other construction. Its object was to furnish a home, which would be a more congenial and fitting refuge than the ordinary charitable institution, to that class of honorably discharged veterans who, disabled by disease, wounds, or otherwise from earning their living, and having no adequate means of support, would otherwise become objects of common charity. Wolcott v. Holcomb, 97 Mich. 361 (56 N. W. 837, 23 L. R. A. 215).

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.W. 220, 181 Mich. 347, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-board-of-managers-of-michigan-soldiers-home-mich-1914.