Obion County v. Hefley

195 S.W.2d 783, 29 Tenn. App. 185, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 195 S.W.2d 783 (Obion County v. Hefley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Obion County v. Hefley, 195 S.W.2d 783, 29 Tenn. App. 185, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BAPTIST, J.

The bill which was filed on May 15, 1941, in the Chancery Court of Gbion County, alleges that Roy Threlkéld is an inmate of the Western State Hospital located in Hardeman County, Tennessee; that he was committed to said Hospital on July 23,1901, by proper orders of Obion County, because he was, and is, a non compos mentis, and has been a continuous inmate of said Hospital since the date of said commitment; that he was committed as a pay patient upon the part of Obion County; that he has been there continuously since said date except for an interval when he was paroled on October 3, 1907, and recommitted on November 7, 1907; that Obion *187 County has been paying at the rate of $200 per year for his board, clothing, support and medical bills rendered to him by the said Hospital; that at the time he was committed to said Hospital he had no guardian and no funds.

That on January 8, 1923, J. A. Threlkeld qualified in the County Coilrt of Obion County as guardian and received funds belonging to the said Roy Threlkeld, but he never paid any of the expenses for the said Roy Threlkeld; that it has recently come to the attention of the complainant about said funds belonging to the said Roy Threl-keld; that J. A. Threlkeld resigned as guardian in the early part of the year 1941, and the defendant J. V. Hefley qualified as such guardian and now has in his hands $2840 belonging to the said Roy Threlkeld.

The bill prays a judgment against the guardian for $3000, stating that a judgment for any larger amount would be of no value, and that the guardian be required to apply the funds in his hands to the discharge of the judgment sought.

The defendant, J. Y. Hefley, as guardian, filed a demurrer and answer, which, in effect, denied that Obion County was entitled to a judgment and demanded strict proof of all allegations in the bill.

On J une 11, 1942, after a part of the evidence had been taken by the complainant, the State of Tennessee filed its petition in the cause, requesting to become a party, and alleging that Roy Threlkeld has been an inmate of the Western State Hospital from November 19, 1901, to February 2, 1942, as a State pay patient; that for his maintenance and upkeep during that period he and his estate is indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of $6851.13; that any sum of money in the hands of the guardian of said Roy Threlkeld should be applied on this indebtedness.

*188 The original bill was predicated upon the proposition that Roy Threlkeld was committed to the hospital in 1901 as a County pay patient, and from that time Obion County had been paying at the rate of $200 per year for his board, etc. There was no evidence offered by the complainant of any specific payment for this patient. The testimony of J. A. Hefley, County Judge of Obion County, that since he became Judge in 1934 Roy Threlkeld had been in the hospital at Bolivar; that the State had paid for thirty patients from Obion County, the County paying for all over that number; that the State Hospital sends a bill to the County every three months and the County pays the bill for the County pay patients. The evidence showed that the County kept no account of individual patients, but paid a lump sum on the quarterly account rendered by the State; that a list was sent each quarter showing only the ones chargeable to the County, however, this is arrived at through no special designation as State or County pay patients, but simply as the difference between the number confined in the hospital and the number absorbed by the State, based upon one patient per every one thousand population of the County.

After the proof for the complainant had been taken and the intervening petition of the State had been filed, the chancellor held that the record did not show whether the County or the State had maintained Roy Threlkeld, and that it was impossible to determine the question in-' volved; therefore, the chancellor ordered a reference to the Master to take proof and report':

“1. The period of time the said Roy Threlkeld has been confined in the Western State Hospital.
“2. Whether or not the County of Obion paid for his maintenance in said hospital and if so: (a) How long a ueriod of time (b) The amount so paid.
*189 ‘ ‘ 3.. Whether or not the State of Tennessee maintained the said Roy Threlkeld in said hospital and if so: (a) For how long a period, of time, (b) How much expended for said maintenance or charged. ’ ’

Upon this order the Clerk and Master took the deposition .of Charles H. Nash, Jr., Assistant Commissioner of Institutions, and reported: .

First:- That Roy Threlkeld was committed to the Western State Hospital on July 24, 1901, and had been a patient there from" that date until the date of the report, except for.an interval from October 3, 1907, to November 22, 1907.

Second: That the patient was committed as a County pay. patient from Obion County and was maintained at the expense of the County for three periods of time: July 24, 1901, to'November 19, 1901; November 22, .1907, to October. 14,1908, and from February 2, 1942, to June 19, 1943, and for these periods the County had paid the sum of $441.50, and that no other charge was entered against the .County for the patient’s maintenance during the -period from July 24, 1901, until June 19, 1943.

Third: That the records of the hospital show that the State of Tennessee expended for the maintenance of the patient the sum of $6851.13.

Exceptions were made to this report, but the exception overruled and the report was confirmed. A decree was entered that the State of Tennessee was entitled to recover of the estate of Roy Threlkeld, for his maintenance-in the hospital, the sum of $6851.13; that Obion County had expended- for the maintenance of the patient the sum of $441.50, but that only $276.11 of said amount was not barred by the statute of limitations; that, after payment of certain costs and fees in connection with the guardianship proceedings, the balance of said fund be *190 paid to tlie State of Tennessee, its claim being entitled to priority.

From this decree Obion Comity has appealed and assigned errors.

Code, Sec. 4437, provides for the admission of three different classes of patients to State Insane Hospitals: First, that class known as State paying patients; second, County paying patients; and third, private paying patients.

Code, Sec. 4438, provides that the first class, or State pay patients shall be those who are poor persons, who are entitled to admission to the hospitals from each County in accordance with the quota as fixed.

This County quota, that is, the number that each County in the State shall be entitled to have maintained and cared for at the'State’s expense shall be one patient for every one thousand inhabitants or population contained in the County, according to the Federal census of 1930 and the Federal census as made and determined in the future. Code, Sec. 4479.

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Related

Nelson v. Loudon County
144 S.W.2d 791 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1940)
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115 Tenn. 279 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W.2d 783, 29 Tenn. App. 185, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obion-county-v-hefley-tennctapp-1944.