McNairy County v. McCoin

41 L.R.A. 862, 101 Tenn. 74
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 41 L.R.A. 862 (McNairy County v. McCoin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNairy County v. McCoin, 41 L.R.A. 862, 101 Tenn. 74 (Tenn. 1898).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

This bill was filed by McNairy County to. recover the sum of $300 for the board and maintenance of a lunatic. The lunatic and her guardian are both made parties defendant.

It is alleged in the bill that some time prior to the year 1891, the said lunatic, Ellen McCoin, left the custody of her regular guardian, in Hardeman [75]*75County, and came to McNairy County; that she remained there for some time in a very destitute condition, without friends and without means of support; that her regular guardian continued to neglect her, and that it was absolutely necessary for the preservation of her - life that necessary food, clothing, and medical attention be furnished her; .that, under these circumstance, in June, 1891, she was admitted by the commissioners of the McNairy County Asylum for the Poor as an inmate.

The authorities of McNairy County, at that time, were not aware that the lunatic had a guardian in Hardeman County, or that he had any funds in his hands belonging to his ward. The county first became apprised of these facts in 1896, and thereupon made demand of said guardian for compensation for the expense incurred in the board and maintenance of said lunatic. The guardian declined to make compensation or to remove her, and she is still an inmate of said institution. It is charged that said guardian has in his hands the sum of five hundred and sixty dollars, funds belonging to said lunatic ward, and the bill prays that an order be made on him for the payment of said account out of said funds.

A demurrer was interposed on behalf of the guardian and his ward, assigning as grounds thereof: (1) That said lunatic ward had been admitted to said asylum without a contract, either express or implied, with the guardian or said ward; (2) because said [76]*76county asylum is a charitable institution, and said necessaries were furnished said lunatic gratuitously, and constitute no charge against her or her said guardian.

The Chancellor sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the bill. The county of McNairy appealed, and has assigned errors.

It is insisted, in support of the action of the Chancellor, that the county asylum of McNairy County, having been established under the general laws of the State, the Court will take judicial notice that it is purely a charitable or eleemosynary institution, with no authority of law for charging inmates for accommodations furnished them. It is said, moreover, there was no contract in this case, either express or implied, and the accommodations having been furnished voluntarily, the county cannot recover, and the principle is invoked that if services are rendered gratuitously compensation cannot afterwards be claimed.

It appears from the record that the McNairy County asylum was established in pursuance of the statute, which provides, viz.: “There shall be provided, at the expense of every county of the State, an asylum for the poor thereof, consisting of a parcel of land of such size, and of buildings thereon of such dimensions and construction, as the County Court-may consider necessary and proper, a majority of the justices being present.” Shannon’s Code, §2678.

£ ‘ The commissioners shall examine all applicants [77]*77for admission into the asylum, and admit or reject any applicant, as they may think right,” etc. Shan1 non’s Code, § 2690.

£ ‘ No person shall be admitted into the asylum who has not been an inhabitant of the county, by actual residence in it, for one whole year next preceding his application. ” §2691.

In the management of the asylum, the commissioners shall have power, viz.: (1) To prescribe rules and regulations for the management of the farm and for the treatment of the inmates of the asylum and modify and change them at pleasure; (2) to prescribe the manner in which said inmates shall live, sleep, be clothed,' and labor, if any of them are able to labor.

It will be observed that in the sections quoted, which are the only provisions of the statute relating to this subject, there is no express authority for the commissioners to demand . compensation for the care and treatment of paupers, but the institution is established as a charity for the benefit of those who are incapable of taking care of themselves. It is insisted, however, that the lunatic ward and her guardian are liable for necessaries furnished one, who, at the time, was not a pauper, but had simply been neglected by her guardian.

Mr. Bishop, in his work on Contracts, Sec. 232, lays down the general rule on this subject, viz.: ££In case of insanity, one who, whether by formal agreement with' the insane person or not, in good [78]*78faith furnishes him with necessaries, being things required for his sustenance or comfort, and suitable to his means, condition, and habits of life, can, if he is not otherwise supplied, recover of him, on a promise which the law will imply, what they are reasonably worth. Were the law not so the insane might perish. Even expenditures and services for the protection of his estate may be included in this class.”

But while stating this general principle, applicable to individuals who have furnished necessaries to the insane, the author lays down a wholly different rule, in cases where the benefit has been conferred by the county. “If a statute,” says the author, “has imposed on a town or county the duty of rendering support to paupers, after it has furnished the sup-’ port in a particular instance, thus discharging its own obligation, it can recover therefor nothing of any other body or person. The common illustration is where the pauper is found afterwards in possession of property, or leaves an estate, upon his death, and it is held, that, in the absence of. fraud, there is no implied promise whereon to -base an action for pay. Another form of reasoning, tending to the same result, is to regard the relief as an executed gift, which, therefore, cannot be reclaimed.” Bishop on Contracts, Sec. 209.

We fail to perceive any sound reason for the distinction taken between the two cases. In the case of Goodale v. Lawrence, 88 N. Y., 513 (S. C., 42 Am. Rep., 259), it was insisted by counsel that [79]*79while an action may be maintained by a citizen for supplies furnished to a wife under such circumstances, no such action can be maintained by overseers of the poor. Said Justice Tracy: ‘£No good reason can be assigned for such a distinction. If a citizen who volunteers to assist an [insane] wife abandoned by her husband, may maintain an action at common law upon the implied assumpsit of the husband, a for-tiori may the poor authorities, who, in furnishing such assistance, are not volunteers, but act in the discharge of a duty imposed by law.”

Again, in Burney v. Keyes, 7 N. H., 576, it was held that where a wife who lived separate from her husband had become poor and unable to maintain herself, and was assisted by the town, the town could maintain an action at common law to recover of the husband the amount of the expenditure on her account. Said Upham, Judge: “No reason can be assigned why an individual should be holden liable at common law for all necessary supplies furnished by a citizen to his suffering wife or child, arising from his neglect to make such provision, while the town, whose special duty it is to grant such relief, should be debarred from such remedy.”

In the case first cited (Goodale v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 L.R.A. 862, 101 Tenn. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnairy-county-v-mccoin-tenn-1898.