Newhouse v. Board of Supervisors

9 N.W.2d 372, 233 Iowa 1007
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 4, 1943
DocketNo. 46244.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 N.W.2d 372 (Newhouse v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newhouse v. Board of Supervisors, 9 N.W.2d 372, 233 Iowa 1007 (iowa 1943).

Opinions

Bliss, J.

The plaintiff lived with her parents in Pottawattamie county until 1929, when she married and went with her husband to Custer County, Nebraska, where she lived until 1940. Four children were the issue of the marriage, the eldest being born in February 1931, and the youngest in September 1940. The husband died March 12, 1940, and she and the children left Nebraska in July 1940 and returned to her home folks in Pottawattamie County, Iowa, where she remained until August 8, 1940, when she established a home for herself and the children in Missouri Valley, in Harrison County, Iowa. This place had always been the market town for her father’s family. *1009 She had no property or income and her own people were not in circumstances to aid her much. For a year or more prior to August 16, 1941, she received relief for herself and the children from Custer County, Nebraska. She testified that when she moved to Missouri Valley she did so with the intention of making it her permanent home. This ease is triable de novo on appeal. We have no doubt of her intention to make Missouri Valley her home. When relief ceased to come from Nebraska, she made application for relief in Harrison county. The director of relief in that county refused to give her any aid and directed her to return to Custer County, Nebraska. On August 7, 1941, apparently on the director’s advice she returned with her children and part of her furniture to her old home in Nebraska, and after being denied relief there, she came back on August 30,1941, to Missouri Valley, where she has continued to live. On November 7, 1941, the following notice was served upon her by the deputy sheriff of Harrison county, to wit:

‘ ‘ State of Iowa, Harrison County, ss: Logan, Iowa.
To Pearl Newhouse
Address Missouri Valley, Iowa, 6th Street.
You are hereby notified that you are not a resident of Harrison County; and as you have, or it is presumed you may apply to said County for aid and support, you are therefore hereby notified to take your departure from this County, and return to the place of your settlement, as Harrison County will not be responsible for your support.
Given under my hand this 4th day of November, 1941.
P. T. Hockett,
Overseer of the Poor of Harrison County, Iowa.”

The plaintiff and her children continued to live in Harrison county after the service of the notice. She received some gratuitous support from -the county from January 1942 to June of that year. On August 17, 1942, the plaintiff filed her petition praying for the support provided for minor children by section 3641 of the 1939 Code. The answer of the defendants was a general denial. There was evidence to establish the facts *1010 which we have set out. After noting findings of fact, in substance as here stated, the decree continues:

“The Court is of the opinion that when the petitioner accepted the relief from the State of Nebraska, that she was receiving it under the rules and laws of Nebraska the same as those of the State of Iowa, there being nothing before the Court to indicate what the rules of Nebraska in respect to residence, legal settlement and so forth might have been during the said time. The presumption probably would be that they were the same as those of Iowa. And having received said relief to about August, 1941, and then having gone back to Nebraska with her children in order to continue the relief, if possible from Nebraska, would be inconsistent with residence in Iowa during the period. She came back to Iowa in August, 1941, and having received notice to depart in November, 1941, she has not acquired a one year’s residence necessary under the Statute, and, therefore,

The relief is denied and the petition dismissed.”

Appellant relies for reversal upon two propositions (1) that the record established that she had been a resident of Harrison county for more than a year prior to the filing of her petition for a widow’s pension (2) that the record did not establish that she had ever been served with the notice to depart from Harrison county. '

To sustain the decree the appellees contend (1) that the appellant had not been a resident of Harrison county for one year preceding the service .on November 4, 1941, of the notice to depart (2) that the evidence establishes that such notice was served on appellant before she had acquired one year’s residence in the county, and within one year prior to the filing of appellant’s petition herein.

I. Section 3641, on which appellant bases her right to recover is in chapter 180 of the Code of 1939, which is entitled, “Care of Neglected, Dependent, and Delinquent Children.” This legislation first appeared in the 1913 Supplement to the Code of 1897. Section 3641 is as follows:

“If the juvenile court finds of record that the mother of a neglected or dependent child is and has been a resident of the *1011 county for one year preceding the filing of the application, and is a widow and a proper guardian, but, by reason of indigency, is unable to properly care for such child, and that the welfare of said child will be promoted by remaining in its own home, it may, on ten days written notice to the chairman of the board of supervisors, of said application, by proper order determine the amount qf money, not exceeding two dollars and fifty cents per week, necessary to enable said mother to properly care for said child. The board of supervisors shall cause said amount to be paid from the county treasury as provided in said order. Such order may, at any time, be modified or vacated by the court. No payment shall be made after said child reaches the age of sixteen years, or after the mother has remarried, or after she has acquired a legal residence in another county, or after she has become- a nonresident of the state.
“No person on whom the notice to depart provided for in chapter 189.4 shall have been served within one year prior to the time of making the application, shall be considered a resident so as to be allowed the aid provided for in this section.”

The last paragraph of the section was added to it by the Forty-second General Assembly, by enacting chapter 72 of its laws, effective July 4, 1927.

Chapter 189.4 is entitled “Support of the Poor,” and most of its. provisions may be found in all of the preceding Codes. At the time of adoption of chapter 72 of the Forty-second General Assembly, the chapter on the “Support of the Poor” was 267, and was so referred to in chapter 72 of the Acts of the Forty-second General Assembly. The section covering the matter of notice has been substantially the same in all of the Codes. In chapter 189.4, Code of 1939, this section is 3828.092, and is as follows:

“Notice to depart. Persons coming into the state, or going from one county-to another, who are county charges or are likely to become such, may be prevented from acquiring a settlement by the authorities of the county, township, or city in which such persons are found warning them to depart therefrom.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.W.2d 372, 233 Iowa 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newhouse-v-board-of-supervisors-iowa-1943.