Payment by Commonwealth for Care of Feeble-Minded

22 Pa. D. & C. 347
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedJanuary 14, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C. 347 (Payment by Commonwealth for Care of Feeble-Minded) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payment by Commonwealth for Care of Feeble-Minded, 22 Pa. D. & C. 347 (Pa. 1935).

Opinion

-We have your request to be advised whether the fiscal officers of the Commonwealth may lawfully approve for payment and pay the sum of $247,418.63 for the maintenance to March 1, 1934, of 647 indigent feeble-minded persons committed to the Philadelphia Institution for Feeble-Minded at Byberry. Philadelphia County seeks to offset this amount against the demand of the Department of Revenue for payment of moneys due to the Commonwealth.

This sum covers a charge for maintenance of inmates for various periods beginning subsequent to February 1925, when the institution was opened. The charge is $2 per week for each such inmate while housed within the institution. The inmates are all minors. All have been found to be feeble-minded and have been committed to the institution by the Municipal Court of Philadelphia in the exercise of its jurisdiction over juvenile dependent, delinquent, and incorrigible children.

The fund from which such payment may be made, if at all, is the appropriation made by Act 45-A, approved June 1, 1933. The authorization for payment at the rate of $2 per week must be found, if at all, in the Act of May 25, 1897, P. L. 83, as amended by the Act of May 13, 1909, P. L. 535, 50 PS §625. The amending act is not material for the purpose of this inquiry. It increased the amount to be paid by the Commonwealth for each indigent insane person from $1.50 per week to $2 per week.

Preliminary to answering your question, we must decide the following questions :

1. Does the term “insane person”, as used in the Act of 1897, as amended, include feeble-minded persons?

2. Are the moneys appropriated by Act 45-A, approved June 1, 1933, available for payments authorized by the Act of 1897, as amended, (a) for feeble-minded persons, and (b) for maintenance charges for feeble-minded persons incurred prior to June 1, 1933?

From our examination of the statutes and the decisions of the courts of this State, we answer each of these questions in the negative. Therefore, the claim of Philadelphia County must be rejected.

Modern medical science distinguishes between insanity, imbecility, and mental defectives, sometimes distinguished further as morons, imbeciles, and idiots.

[348]*348Century Dictionary (Revised ed.), states the following definitions:

“Imbecile — (1) Without physical strength; feeble; impotent; helpless. (2) Mentally feeble; fatuous; having the mental faculties undeveloped or greatly impaired. (3) Marked by mental feebleness or incapacity; indicating weakness of mind; inane; stupid.”

“Imbecility— . . . weakness of either body or mind, but especially the latter. . . . weakness of mind, owing to defective development or to loss of faculty, as to incapacitate its subject for the ordinary duties of life, and for legal consent, choice or responsibility.”

Century Dictionary (Revised ed.), defines “moron” as “an individual with arrested intellectual development, whose mentality corresponds to that of a normal child from 8 to 12 years of age.”

The New Century Dictionary (1927 ed.), defines “moron” to mean: “A person of arrested intellectual development whose mentality corresponds to that of a normal child from 8 to 12 years of age.”

Century Dictionary (Revised ed.), defines “insane” to mean: “(1) . . . unsound or deranged in mind; crazy. (2) ... wild, ‘insensate’, senseless. . . . (4) . . . crazed, lunatic, demented, maniacal.”

The words of the Act of 1897 must be construed in the sense in which they were understood at the time of its enactment: 59 C. J. 1022, sec. 607 et seq. Popular construction by the general public over a long period of time should be considered: United States v. Farrar, 38 F. (2d) 515, affirmed in 281 U. S. 624; Eden Musee American Co. v. Bingham, 58 Misc. Rep. 644, 108 N. Y. Supp. 200. Contemporaneous executive construction is also entitled to weight: Grant, Hutcheson Co. et al. v. Pennsylvania Securities Comm., 301 Pa. 147 (1930); Garr et al. v. Fuls et al., 286 Pa. 137 (1926); Commonwealth v. Mann, 168 Pa. 290 (1895); and interpretation by the executive department at the time the law was passed is strong evidence of intent: New York Life Ins. Co. v. Bowers, 34 F. (2d) 60, affirmed in 39 F. (2d) 556, and certiorari granted 281 U. S. 718; Scott v. Commissioner of Civil Service, 272 Mass. 237, 172 N. E. 218; Musgrove v. B. & O. R. Co., 111 Md. 629, 75 Atl. 245.

Legislative construction in one act of the meaning of certain words is entitled to consideration in construing the same words in another act but is not conclusive, as the words may have been used in different senses: 59 C. J. 1033, sec. 612; Phila. & Erie R. Co. v. Catawissa R. R. Co., 53 Pa. 20 (1866); Must Hatch Incubator Co., Inc., v. Patterson, 32 F. (2d) 714; Chapin v. City of Lowell, 194 Mass. 486, 80 N. E. 618 (1907).

In Phila. & Erie R. Co. v. Catawissa R. R. Co., supra, the court said (p. 60) :

“. . . words of a statute — if of common use — are to be taken in their natural, plain, obvious and ordinary signification. The legislative intent is to be sought for through this ordinary signification of common words; and if a contemporaneous construction of the same words by the legislature itself can be discovered, it is very high evidence of the sense in which the words are to be received; for contemporánea expositio est fortissima in lege.”

In Must Hatch Incubator Co., Inc., v. Patterson, supra, the court said (p. 716):

“It is a rule of statutory construction that a legislative construction in one act of the meaning of a word is entitled to consideration in construing the same word in another act, and this rule is entitled to great weight where the two acts pertain to the same subject-matter. . . .”

When the Act of 1897 was enacted, the civil status and custody of lunatics [349]*349and habitual drunkards were regulated by the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 592, and the admission into and discharge from hospitals for the insane in the Commonwealth of insane persons was regulated by the Act of April 20, 1869, P. L. 78, as amended.

Section 67 of the Act of 1836 provided:

“The word ‘lunatic’ in this act, shall be construed to mean and include every person of unsound mind, whether he may have been such from his nativity, as idiots, or have become such from any cause whatever.”

The Act of 1869 did not define the term “insane person”. It is to be noted that the word “lunatic” was used by the legislature to include, within the application of the Act of 1836, both the insane person and the idiot.

In construing the word “lunatic” as used in the Act of 1836, the courts have held it does not include a person suffering from mere weakness of mind short of idiocy: Commonwealth v. Reeves, 140 Pa. 258 (1891); In re Albro, 22 Pa. C. C. 70 (1898); In re Smith, 22 Pa. C. C. 487 (1899), affirmed in 12 Pa. Superior Ct. 649 (1900); Hetrick’s Case, 23 Pa. C. C. 522 (1899). These cases clearly distinguish the feeble-minded from the insane and the idiot, and the insane from the idiot and the feeble-minded.

The Act of June 19, 1901, P. L. 574, amending the Act of June 25, 1895, P. L. 300, was enacted for the protection of the weak in mind: Hoffman’s Estate, 209 Pa. 357 (1904). This act was later repealed and supplied by the Act of May 28, 1907, P. L. 292, 50 PS §941.

The Act of 1895 applied to persons weak in mind.

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Related

United States v. Farrar
281 U.S. 624 (Supreme Court, 1930)
Musgrove v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
75 A. 245 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1909)
G., H. Co. &8212 P.B. Co. &8212 W. O. R. Co. v. P. S.C.
151 A. 702 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Garr v. Fuls
133 A. 150 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Eden Musee American Co. v. Bingham
58 Misc. 644 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)
Philadelphia & Erie Railroad v. Catawissa Railroad
53 Pa. 20 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1866)
Commonwealth v. Reeves
21 A. 315 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1891)
Commonwealth v. Mann
31 A. 1003 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
Hoffman's Estate
58 A. 665 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Smith
12 Pa. Super. 649 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1900)
Chapin v. City of Lowell
80 N.E. 618 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1907)
Scott v. Commissioner of Civil Service
172 N.E. 218 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1930)

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22 Pa. D. & C. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payment-by-commonwealth-for-care-of-feeble-minded-padeptjust-1935.