Redmon v. Davis

174 P.2d 945, 115 Colo. 415, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 18, 1946
DocketNo. 15,494.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 945 (Redmon v. Davis) 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
Redmon v. Davis, 174 P.2d 945, 115 Colo. 415, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 173 (Colo. 1946).

Opinions

CERTAIN old age pensioners sought to have declared unconstitutional section 10 of the Old Age Pension Act, S.L. '37, chapter 201, page 885, as amended by S.L. '39, page 461, providing funeral and burial expenses for a recipient. The trial court declined to so hold, and its judgment is here for review.

Amended section 10 of the act provides:

"On the death of the recipient reasonable funeral and burial expenses not exceeding one hundred dollars ($100.00) shall be paid by the county department if the estate of the deceased is insufficient to pay such reasonable funeral and burial expenses and the persons *Page 417 legally responsible for the support of the deceased are unable to pay such reasonable funeral and burial expenses. The state department shall adopt the necessary rules and regulations to provide for the payment of funeral expenses to the mortician and the burial expenses to the cemetery.

"The ownership by the recipient of burial space in a cemetery or his purchase thereof during the time he is receiving a pension under the terms of this act shall not disqualify him from receiving a pension hereunder."

Plaintiffs contend that the above quoted legislative provision is in conflict with article XXIV of the Colorado Constitution (old age pension amendment), and more particularly sections 4 and 7 thereof. Section 4 reads as follows: "The state board of public welfare, or such other agency as may be authorized by law to administer old age pensions, shall cause all moneys deposited in the old age pension fund to be paid out to qualified pensioners, after defraying the expense of administering the said fund, within ten days following the expiration of the calendar year in which deposits are made in said fund." Section 7 reads: "All the moneys deposited in the old age pension fund shall remain inviolate for the purposes for which created, and no part thereof shall be transferred to any other fund, or used or appropriated for any other purpose." It is contended that section 10 of the act, providing for funeral expenses, violates said section 4, which provides that all moneys deposited in the old age pension fund "after defraying the expense of administering the said fund" shall be paid out to qualified pensioners; that the payment of funeral expenses is not a payment to a qualified pensioner.

It is further contended that the before-mentioned section 10 also violates that part of section 7, article XXIV of the Constitution, which provides that no part of the moneys should be transferred to any fund or used or appropriated for any other purpose than that for which the fund was created. *Page 418

Plaintiffs further rely upon our decision in Davis v.Pensioners' Protective Ass'n, 110 Colo. 380,135 P.2d 142, where, in discussing section 4 above quoted, we said:

"Section 4 of the amendment provides that at the end of the year all moneys that have been provided in the old age pension fund which have not been paid out to pensioners, `after defraying the expense of administering the said fund,' shall be paid out to the qualified pensioners. The intended effect of this section is that the pensioners shall receive all moneys that enter into the old age pension fund, except such as are required to defray the expense of administering the fund. If five per cent of the pension fund is allocated for administration expense and only a portion of it is used, and the remainder is transferred to the emergency and contingent, or any other state fund, the pensioners will fall short, by the amount of the surplus so transferred, of receiving the amount to which they are entitled under the amendment. Furthermore, section 7 of the old age pension amendment provides that `all the moneys deposited in the old age pension fund shall remain inviolate for the purposes for which created.' The clear import of the language following the quoted portion of said section 7 is susceptible of no other interpretation than that the moneys deposited in the fund shall not be transferred to any other fund or used for any purpose other than for administrative expenses and for making the payments to the old age pensioners.

* * *

"In so far as money allocated from the old age pension fund is used to defray the expenses of administering relief schemes other than the old age pension plan of relief, this constitutes an unconstitutional diversion of pension funds from their constitutionally prescribed use. The trial court properly so held."

In that case, however, the question before us was whether expenses of administering relief schemes, other *Page 419 than those of the old age pension plan of relief, could be allocated from the old age pension fund. We held that such would be an unlawful diversion of the fund; that there is "a clear legal duty enjoined by the Constitution to use all funds not expended for the expense of administration for the old age pension scheme of relief for the payment of pensions." That case, however, does not answer the question before us here, as to whether the payment of funeral expenses of a recipient of an old age pension is the payment of a pension.

There seems to be little pertinent authority on this point. The Attorney General cites Purifoy, State Treasurerv. Teasley, Judge, 188 Ala. 416, 66 So. 6. The main point in that case was the holding that a widow could be a pensioner under a state act which provided that the unexpended portion of a pension check could be applied toward the funeral expenses of the pensioner, where payment could not otherwise be provided. Plaintiffs point out that that case is unlike the instant one; in that the Alabama act provided simply that the unexpended portion of a check, already issued during the pensioner's lifetime, should be applied toward funeral expenses; whereas, in the instant case a definite payment is provided after the death of the pensioner to cover funeral and burial expenses.

In Wolfe v. Wolfe, 154 Mo. App. 218, 134 S.W. 33, the Court of Appeals interprets a 1904 act of Congress providing that $1,000 shall be paid to the legal representatives of any postal railway clerk killed while on duty. That case is of interest here because of the fact that the court refers to the Act of Congress as "a pension." Thus the term "pension" in that case is used to designate a lump sum to be paid after the death of the person for whose benefit the pension is created.

[1] The history of legislation in this state indicates that "assistance" and "pension" have been used synonymously. Thus, in the Old Age Assistance Act, approved March 31, 1936, S.L. Second Extraordinary Session '36, *Page 420 chapter 6, section 1, "assistance" is defined as "money payments to aged persons in need or payments toward the funeral expenses of such persons as provided in this act." In the Old Age Pension Act, supra, enacted by virtue of the Old Age Pension Amendment voted into effect in November 1936, an identical definition is given to the word "pension." Likewise, in Words and Phrases, vol. 31, p. 666, there appears the following: "Old age assistance. Though `pension' ordinarily suggests idea of bounty or reward for service rendered, term might include a grant which is mere gratuity, and grant of assistance to one merely because he has reached certain age would constitute `pension' within constitutional provision."

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 945, 115 Colo. 415, 1946 Colo. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmon-v-davis-colo-1946.