State Board of Corrections v. City & County of Denver

156 P. 1100, 61 Colo. 266, 1916 Colo. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 3, 1916
DocketNo. 8810
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 156 P. 1100 (State Board of Corrections v. City & County of Denver) 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
State Board of Corrections v. City & County of Denver, 156 P. 1100, 61 Colo. 266, 1916 Colo. LEXIS 232 (Colo. 1916).

Opinion

Scott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in mandamus to compel the authorities in control of the State Asylum for the Insane, to receive and care for certain insane patients from the City and County of Denver, lawfully adjudged insane, and now a charge upon the county.

The action is against' the superintendent of the institution, and the Colorado Board of Corrections, charged by law with the conduct and management of the asylum.

It appears from the alternative writ made permanent on final hearing, that the sheriff of the county, acting under the proper authority and with proper commitments, proceeded to the asylum with certain persons adjudged to be insane, and that the superintendent of the asylum declined to receive such patients, and that the sheriff was compelled to return them to the custody of the county authorities. The specific complaint is as to four such patients, though there is a general charge as to many others.

The defense of the respondent officials, after the admission of the facts set forth in the petition, alleges:

1. “That on or about the . . day of.......... and prior to the time when the respondents composing the Colorado Board of Corrections were appointed-and qualified, it became, — by reason of the crowded condition of the insane [269]*269hospital at Pueblo and an excess of insane persons committed to said asylum over the physical possibilities of receiving, keeping and caring for such persons, — necessary to adopt rules and regulations concerning the admission of patients to the said asylum; that in pursuance of the said necessity, the Colorado Board of Lunacy Commissioners, which, at that time, was, under the statutes of Colorado, the board charged with the control and management of said State Insane Asylum, duly and legally passed reasonable and proper regulations for the admission of patients thereunder, and that said reasonable rules and regulations so passed are still in force and effect, and were in force and effect at all times subsequent to the adoption thereof and prior to the issuance of the alternative writ herein, and at the time of the issuance of said writ; that the said rules and regulations adopted by the said board were in the following words and figures:

"The superintendent is instructed to estimate the ratio of cases to which each county is entitled, basing such estimate on the capacity of the institution, and on the population of each county as shown by the latest United States Census.

In case of death or discharge he shall allot such vacancy or vacancies to such County or Counties, the number' of whose inmates is below the estimated ratio, giving the preference to those counties who shall have on file with him the greatest number of commitments, except that he shall not allot to any one county more vacancies than the difference between the number of inmates from such county and the total of the ratio of that county.

If at any time no one of the counties whose number of inmates is below their estimated ratio, shall have on -file any commitments, then, he shall assign such vacancies as may occur to other counties, receiving the patients in.the order in which the commitments on file show them to have been adjudged.

[270]*270The superintendent is further ordered to send a copy of these instructions to the County Judge of each and every county, together with a request that each County Judge file with the superintendent of the Colorado Insane Asylum a copy of the commitment, and judge’s certificate, in each case that shall be committed as insane in their court, in order that the above plan may be carried out fairly in the case of all counties.

2. That in pursuance of the resolution aforesaid, the said superintendent made the estimate therein provided for, and that the said relator herein, prior to said time of the adoption of said resolution, and the making of the assessment therein provided for, and ever since said time, and to the present date, has had and has now in said State Insane Asylum the number of inmates to which the relator is entitled, and has had at all times and now has a few more inmates in the said asylum than it is entitled to under the said resolution, and under any fair and reasonable plan for the distribution of space in the said insane asylum among the counties of the State of Colorado which could be adopted; that at' the time referred to in the said alternative writ, of the transportation of said four mentioned insane persons to Pueblo from the City of Denver, the superintendent of the State Insane Asylum had notified relator that he could accommodate five insane persons from the City and County of Denver, and that in response to his said notice as aforesaid, the said City and County of Denver sent nine insane persons to the said institution, and the said superintendent under the said resolution, rules and regulations aforesaid, could only accommodate and care for five thereof; that at said time the said superintendent of the said asylum accepted five of the nine so sent to the said asylum, and refused to accept four thereof under, and by virtue of the authority of the said reasonable rules and regulations so adopted as aforesaid.

[271]*2713. That the physical capacity of the insane asylum at Pueblo is 1190 patients of all ages and of both sexes; that the said asylum was, at the times mentioned in the alternative writ of tender of the said named insane persons, and now-is, filled to'"its full capacity; that at that time it was impossible for the authorities in charge of said insane asylum to accept or care for any more patients than they did have; that there were, at that time 1190 insane inmates of the said insane asylum, which said number was all for which. the State of Colorado had made and has made provision, and there was no room for any further or additional inmates at said time, and that because of these things and matters and the physical limitations of the said hospital and insane asylum, the said superintendent at the said time and place refused to accept the said four named persons, and for no other reason.

4. That respondents, nor no other person, have any legal authority to arrange for the care of insane persons committed to the State Insane Asylum in any other place or places than the insane asylum itself, and that they have no funds and have never had any funds for making any other or further arrangements, and that for this reason they did not make any further or other arrangements for caring for said four named persons or any thereof, and they cannot do so until the legislature of the State of Colorado, in its wisdom, sees fit to provide therefor.

5. That they are informed and believe that there are, in the State, of Colorado,' situated in the same manner ‘ as the four insane persons set out and referred to in the alternative writ, approximately three hundred and twenty-five insane persons, distributed throughout the various counties of the said state, and being cared for in the various counties ; that said number makes an excess of such number of insane persons over and aboye the physical capacity of the Colorado State Insane Asylum.

[272]*2726.

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Bluebook (online)
156 P. 1100, 61 Colo. 266, 1916 Colo. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-board-of-corrections-v-city-county-of-denver-colo-1916.