Overseers of Paterson v. Overseers of Byram

23 N.J.L. 394
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 23 N.J.L. 394 (Overseers of Paterson v. Overseers of Byram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overseers of Paterson v. Overseers of Byram, 23 N.J.L. 394 (N.J. 1852).

Opinion

Ogden, J.

On the first day of September, 1849, Augustus G. King and Ira K. Johnson, two justices of the peace in the county of Sussex, in this state, made an order, under their hands and seals, addressed to a constable of the said county and to the overseers of the poor of the township of Paterson, directing the removal of one Elizabeth Brooks and of her four children, the eldest of whom was aged six years, and the youngest aged one year, from the township of Byram, in the county of Sussex, to the township of Paterson, in the county of Passaic.

The removals were accordingly made, and, on an appeal from the order by the township of Paterson, the sessions of [397]*397the county of Sussex affirmed the act of the two justices. Dissatisfied with the proceedings, the appellants have brought the case by certiorari into this court, and the legality of the order of removal is now to be examined.

The jurisdiction of the two justices over the subject matter was conferred upon them, either by the 17th or by the 27th section of the “ Act for the settlement and relief of the poor,” found in Rev. Stat. 877.

It is contended by the plaintiffs in certiorari that the order is erroneous, whether it was founded upon the one or the other of those enactments.

In the 27th section, provision is made for the relief of a poor person having a legal settlement within the state of New Jersey. If application be made to the overseers of the poor of a township for relief, by or for any poor person within the township, proceedings are directed, by that section, which secure aid, upon the adjudication and determination, by two justices of the peace, of the legal settlement of the poor person within the state. If such settlement is found to be within the county where the relief is applied for, an order can be made for the removal of the person to the county poorhouse, if any there be, or if none, then to the township where the last legal settlement has been adjudicated to be ; if such settlement is found to be in any other county within the state, an appropriate order of removal is directed.

In the 17th section, which has a twofold purpose, construed by decisions which have been made upon language used in the 23d section of the act of 1774, similar to that employed in the first clause of this section, provision is made, upon information given by the overseers, for the removal of persons likely to become chargeable upon a township where they have no settlement, but who are settled elsewhere in the state. The section also embraces cases of application for relief for persons who are not legally settled in the township applied to, and who may have no legal settlement in the state, and cases where the overseer has reason to believe that such persons will become chargeable. By it, a new power is given to the justices, winch requires them to examine the poor person, [398]*398and to take other testimony as to the place within the state where he or she had last resided for six consecutive months; and upon the justices determining that fact, the township wherein such residence had been permitted is declared liable as and for the place of settlement of such poor person, and provision is made for a removal thither.

The language of that section was obscure, and it seemed to introduce a new element into the doctrine of settlements, and to change the whole law in regard to removals. On the 19th of March, 1852, a supplemental act was appended, which went into immediate effect, repealing the 17th section last referred to, and substituting another enactment in lieu thereof, and providing that the act of 1846 should be construed and considered as if the said enactment of 1852 had been incorporated into said act, as the 17th section thereof.

The phraseology is peculiar. That supplement was designed, to explain the 17th section of the original act, and to give a legislative construction to legislative language. It declares that the new section is substituted in lieu of the 17th section of the former act, and provides that the original act shall be construed and considered as it would have been if the new section had been enacted in 1846, instead of the said 17th section,

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.J.L. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overseers-of-paterson-v-overseers-of-byram-nj-1852.