People Ex Rel. Zimmerman v. Herder

223 P.2d 197, 122 Colo. 456, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 9, 1950
Docket16449
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 P.2d 197 (People Ex Rel. Zimmerman v. Herder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Zimmerman v. Herder, 223 P.2d 197, 122 Colo. 456, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 269 (Colo. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holland

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented in this action is whether or not the State of Colorado, through the superintendent of the state hospital, can recover for the maintenance of an insane pauper son from the inmate’s father, or next of kin.

Relying on section 16, chapter 105, ’35 C.S.A., as amended by chapter 170, S.L. ’45, the Superintendent of the Colorado State Hospital instituted this action to recover from defendant in error, as the father and next of kin of Reuben Herder, an inmate duly and regularly committed to the hospital, expenses of his maintenance at the rate of $30 per month from March 23, 1945 to August 9, 1949, approximating- $1,943.

Omitting the formal parts, the substance of the complaint is to the effect that the inmate, Reuben Herder,-is a pauper; that defendant is the-father and nearest relative of said inmate and is financially able to provide for the support and maintenance of his lunatic son at the Colorado State Hospital, and has failed to do so; that the inmate, Reuben Herder, was, on the 23rd day of February, 1944, duly adjudged a mental incompetent *458 and committed to the state hospital by the county court of Larimer county; that in the matter of the adjudication, it was further determined that the said Reuben Herder has no estate out of which the expense of his care and maintenance at the hospital could be paid; that he was regularly admitted to the state hospital on or about April 24, 1944, and escaped therefrom to be apprehended and returned on or about May 15, 1944, and remained in the hospital until August 9, 1949, when he again escaped and has at all times since been at large; that on November 9, 1948, and March 2, 1949, the superintendent of the hospital notified the judge of the county court of Larimer county that the defendant, Lewis Herder, had failed and refused to contribute to the support of his pauper son; that the judge of the county court failed and neglected to cause any investigation to be made of the financial condition of the father, Lewis Herder, or of any persons legally responsible for the support and maintenance of the incompetent pauper; that upon information obtained from an independent investigation, plaintiff alleges that the father, Lewis Herder, is possessed of real and personal property of the value of many thousands of dollars and is in all respects financially able to pay for the reasonable support and maintenance of his mentally incompetent pauper son at the state hospital, and prays for judgment accordingly.

Defendant filed motion to dismiss on the ground that the complaint failed to state a claim against the defendant upon which relief could be granted. Plaintiff, on motion, was granted leave to amend, and did file an amended complaint. The original motion to dismiss was considered as applying to the amended complaint and after both parties filed memorandum briefs, the court, on December 5, 1949, sustained the motion and ordered the cause dismissed. Error is assigned to this final order of dismissal.

In substance, the error, of which complaint is made, is that the ruling of the trial court in dismissing plaintiff’s *459 complaint is contrary to law. Consideration of this specification can be more easily effected by reference to the finding of the trial court, which is as follows:

“The first point raised, as to whether the committed person is a pauper, seems to be supplied in the amended complaint.

“The second point—that the State has not followed the law as provided in Sections 28 to 33—is well taken, if this action is to be governed by those sections. Those sections, now compiled in Article 3 of Chapter 105, C.S.A., have in the main been carried forward from the General Laws, and were originally adopted before the State Hospital was available. They do provide for payment by the county in the first instance, presentation and repayment by the State, and after payment of ‘any such account’ (to the county), action will lie in behalf of the State.

“But the amended complaint as drawn is based upon Section 1, Chapter 107 Sess. Laws 1945, amending Section 16, Chapter 105, C.S.A. And if the amended complaint states a claim for relief that can be granted, it must be under that amended Section 16. That such is the intent of the Attorney General will appear from his opinion and direction to all County Judges, dated November 5, 1949, on the subject of Liability for Support of Insane and Feeble Minded Persons.

“The fact that the directory procedure of investigation and report by the County Judge failed, through no fault of the plaintiff or Asylum Superintendent, should not thwart a recovery, if the relative is in fact liable.

“Ruling on the Motion to Dismiss would seem to depend upon (1) whether amended Sec. 16 gives or preserves a right of action by the State against the father of the patient, and (2) whether ‘such measures to collect’ ‘are provided by law.’ In these respects there remains a doubt in my mind.

“Sec. 15, Chap. 116, S.L. 1915 (compiled as Sec. 16, Chap. 105 C.S.A.) provides, ‘Nothing in this chapter *460 shall be construed, etc.’, and any moneys ‘expended by county’ may be recovered, etc. But under Sec. 8 (Sec. 9, Chap. 105 C.S.A.) no county would have expended any such where commitment is made to the State Hospital, for no account could be presented to the county and audited for treatment in the State Asylum. Thus that provision in that section giving the county a right to recover would seem not to apply to patients in the State Asylum.

“It is noted that the preservation of the Liability of relatives by Sec. 15, Chap. 118 S.L. 1915, is that ‘nothing in this chapter (act) shall be so construed as to exempt the relatives from liability, etc.’ Obviously that provision could not affect a later act, for example, the initiated act adopted November 7, 1916, and published in 1917 SL at Page 273, and later compiled in part as Sections 42 and 43, Chap. 105, C.S.A. 1935.

“The later statute—Sections 42 and 43—makes all persons committed to the State Hospital ‘wards of the state,’ to be cared for by the state through the Board of Corrections (Division of Public Welfare), and repeals all conflicting acts and parts of acts: Thus, becoming wards of the state, is liability for their support thereby limited to the state and their own property and estate? Such construction is supported by additional levies provided by the 1917 laws and subsequent appropriations by legislatures. The opinion of the Attorney General, supra, seems to interpret ‘wards of the state’ as meaning that the state is charged with their support.

“The prohibition against construing ‘this chapter (No. 118 of of 1915 S.L.) so as to, etc.’ was compiled in the 1935 Annotated Statutes as ‘nothing in this Article (Art. 1 of Chap. 195, C.S.A.) which is later approved and adopted as official by Chap. 120, S.L. 1937. Again it is obvious that could not affect the Sections 42 and 43 in another Article 4, of Chap. 105, C.S.A.

“And by the 1945 Amendment of Sec. 16, Chap. 105, C.S.A. the provision remains ‘nothing in this

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.2d 197, 122 Colo. 456, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-zimmerman-v-herder-colo-1950.