State Department of Public Health & Welfare v. Jennings

464 S.W.2d 750, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 494
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1970
DocketNo. 25568
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 464 S.W.2d 750 (State Department of Public Health & Welfare v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Department of Public Health & Welfare v. Jennings, 464 S.W.2d 750, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 494 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

MAUGHMER, Commissioner.

The State Department of Public Health and Welfare appeals from the judgment of the Circuit Court remanding the Director’s decision dated January 28, 1970, which denied the claim of Thomas R. Jennings, Respondent, for Old Age Assistance benefits.

Thomas R. Jennings, a resident of Bates County, Missouri, is aged, infirm, and since June, 1968, has been living at Pine Tree Rest Home, Butler, Missouri. On October 16, 1968, his application for Old Age Assistance benefits was denied after the usual investigation. He duly appealed from that decision and a hearing before a referee was held on January 23, 1969. This hearing again resulted in a denial. On further appeal and under date of February 18, 1969, the director of the department denied the claim. The basis of these denials was that “claimant was ineligible when his application was rejected”.

Section 208.010, V.A.M.S. contains some provisions which are applicable to this claim. We quote:

“2. Benefits shall not be payable to any claimant who: (1) (a) Has, or whose spouse with whom he is living has, * * transferred real or personal property, of which he is the record or beneficial owner, or any interest therein of any value within five years preceding the date of the investigation without receiving fair and valuable consideration. * * *
“(b) * * * provided that in the discretion of the division of welfare a claimant may become eligible to receive benefits if the * * * property assigned, conveyed, transferred, or property of equal value, is reconveyed or its equivalent value returned to the claimant,
⅜ ⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
“(3) Owns or possesses cash or securities in the sum of one thousand dollars or more; * *

This denial of February 18, 1969, was based upon two “Findings of Fact” made by the director, the correctness of which is not disputed: The first is that claimant was the owner of a town lot valued at $1,000.00, which was conveyed by him and his wife, to claimant’s sister Ella Wilt, and her husband, for the recited consideration of one dollar. We shall designate this piece of property hereinafter as tract No. 1. Claimant also transferred a bank deposit of $1,000.00 to his sister Ella Wilt, in consideration of “care” which she had allegedly furnished to him. The statute does not, insofar as Old Age Assistance is concerned, recognize care and support furnished by relatives ,as “fair and just consideration” for the [752]*752transfer of a claimant’s property. The second basis of denial concerned a town lot which we shall refer to as tract No. 2. Claimant and his then wife, Margie Jennings, on January 4, 1967, for the recited consideration of “One dollar and love and affection” conveyed this property to Mrs. Jennings’ daughter. It was reasonably valued at $6,500.00, but was the sole property of claimant’s wife Margie Jennings. This tract No. 2 had been acquired by Mrs. Jennings and her former husband James H. Storms. Title by the entirety was held by Margie and James Storms. Mr. Storms died and so the property passed absolutely to his wife who later married claimant. The claimant’s only interest in this property was the possibility of inheritance if he survived his wife and she still owned the property at that time. The director’s Findings of Fact also recited that claimant “suffered a stroke of paralysis about March 24, 1966, and has been cared for in the home of grantee (Ella Wilt) for the past fourteen months.” This apparently refers to a period prior to May 8, 1967, the date on which the $1,000.00 bank account was transferred.

From the record filed in this court it appears that an appeal or application to review the director’s first decision — the one dated February 18, 1969 — was filed in the circuit court'. In any event, the judge’s docket for the circuit court of Bates County, Missouri, has a page devoted to this case. A photostat of that page is filed herein and contains the following entry under date of November 14, 1969: “Motion to dismiss sustained — the defendant agreeing to grant plaintiff an administrative hearing as soon as reasonably possible.”

Appellant has favored us with a compilation entitled “Appeals and Complaints”. This document appears to be a list of the administrative rules and procedures under which the division operates. On page 10 we find this direction, “If, following the filing of an appeal, there is a change in circumstances which becomes known to the county office, a reapplication should he taken or a reinvestigation should be made * * (Italics ours.) We assume such a reinvestigation would lead to a redetermination if the newly discovered or changed circumstances so required.

Thereafter, after due notice, and on January 22, 1970, what was described in the report as an administrative hearing was held at the county welfare office in Butler, Missouri, before C. J. Quimby, Referee. Mr. Edward J. Murphy, attorney, appeared for the claimant who was still a domiciliary patient at the Pine Tree Rest Home. No appearance was listed for the Division of Welfare. We are not quite sure whether this was a rehearing on the original claim pursuant to the apparent agreement therefor, as reflected by the entry in the circuit judge’s docket from which we have quoted, or whether it should be treated as a new claim for benefits. We think this does not make a great deal of difference as we would reach the same conclusion under either contingency.

At this last hearing, the claimant called two witnesses, namely, Margaret Solomon, caseworker for the welfare office, and Ida Sliffe, a sister of claimant. The referee placed in evidence the February 18, 1969 decision of the director. The referee then stated that the only evidence admissible at the hearing before him would be that the land or the bank deposit (which the director’s decision found were transferred without adequate consideration) “has been restored to claimant” and that any other evidence would be inadmissible because it “had become res judicata” because of the director’s decision of February 18, 1969.

Although the referee refused to allow formal offers of proof, claimant was permitted to state what he proposed to prove. We shall treat these proposals, which we now list, as offers of proof.

1. Claimant had no right, title or beneficial interest in or to tract No. 2, which was the sole and separate property of his wife Margie Jennings; that his said wife had now divorced him and any contingent [753]*753right of inheritance to said property was thereby eliminated and that it is improper to charge any part of this tract, valued at $6,500.00, against claimant’s right to Old Age Assistance benefits.

2. Tract No. 1 has since been sold for $600.00 cash and this sum expended for care of claimant in the Pine Tree Rest Home.

3. The $1,000.00 bank deposit has also been expended to pay for care of claimant in the Pine Tree Rest Home.

4. That it clearly appears claimant has not, as of this date, transferred property in excess of $1,000.00 without fair and adequate consideration, and is therefore entitled to be placed on the rolls.

The circuit court directed the director to reinstate petitioner “on the public welfare rolls of this state as of the date of the application”. Presumably this would be as of the date of the original or first application.

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Related

Green v. Yarbrough
771 S.W.2d 760 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1989)
Hill v. Missouri Department of Public Health & Welfare
520 S.W.2d 182 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
464 S.W.2d 750, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-public-health-welfare-v-jennings-moctapp-1970.