State Department of Public Welfare v. Cameron

25 N.W.2d 504, 249 Wis. 531, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 226
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 N.W.2d 504 (State Department of Public Welfare v. Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court 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 Welfare v. Cameron, 25 N.W.2d 504, 249 Wis. 531, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 226 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

Decedent, an adult single person, was found insane and committed to the Winnebago State Hospital on June 25,1926. He remained at this institution until August 4, 1938, when he was transferred to the Outagamie county asylum at Appleton. He remained here until his death on August 17, 1944. Appellant, successor to the board of control, filed its claim in the county court against decedent’s estate for care and maintenance during the entire period. The court applied the ten-year statute of limitation to the claim and it is this that appellant complains of. The heirs of decedent are two adult brothers. Appellant contends that the claim of the State Department of Public Welfare from June 25, 1926, to August 17, 1934, is not barred by the statute of limitations. This requires a study of the applicable statutes and the several decisions that have construed them.

In 1919, by ch. 345, of the laws of that year, secs. 600 and 604g, Stats., were consolidated with sec. 1505a, and the consolidated section was numbered 49.10. Sec. 600 provided, in substance, that district attorneys under the direction of their *534 respective county boards “shall, in the name of the county, sue for and collect from the property of any patient maintained at a state hospital or county asylum for the insane,” or from persons legally bound to support such patient, the amount charged to and by such county for such support. The section provided for filing claims against the estate of deceased persons. Sec. 604g provided that “The property and estate of any insane person kept in any state or county hospital or county asylum or kept by any county at its charge and the property and the estate of any: deceased person who shall have been a patient of such hospital or asylum shall be liable for the continuing and past support, maintenance of such person or patient and chargeable for the payment thereof.” Sec. 1505a was entitled “Action for poor relief” and provided in substance that if any person who heretofore or hereafter may receive support under ch. 63, Stats., in the county, town, city, or other municipal corporation of the state was at the time of receiving such relief the owner of property, the value of such relief and support shall be a legal and valid claim and debt against such person. The net result of the revision was to consolidate sections relating to the liability of and collection from insane persons for institutional care and maintenance with a section relating to the liability of and collection from indigents.

Sec. 49.10, Stats., provided that “if any person who has received any relief, support, or maintenance at public charge, under this chapter or as an inmate of any state or municipal institution, was at the time of receiving such relief, support, or maintenance the owner of property, the authorities charged with the care of the poor tif the municipality, or the board in charge of the institution, chargeable with such relief, support, or maintenance may sue for and collect the value of the same against such person and against his estate. . . . The statutes of limitation shall not be pleaded in defense; but the court may, in its discretion, refuse to render judgment or allow the claim in favor of the claimant in any case where a parent, wife, *535 or child is dependent on such property for future support.

Under sec. 49.10, Stats., as enacted in 1919, it was held in Guardianship of Decker, 181 Wis. 484, 195 N. W. 316, that the only property subject to a claim for support was that possessed during the period when maintenance and support was given. The same construction was followed in Guardianship of Angle, 183 Wis. 648, 198 N. W. 851. An amendment in 1925 added the words “or at any time thereafter” in such a way as to make it clear that the property of a person receiving support or maintenance as an inmate of a state or municipal institution was liable, even though the property had been acquired subsequent to the time of receiving public support. This amendment was construed in Estate of Pelishek, 216 Wis. 176, 256 N. W. 700, as prospective in operation.

In 1935, sec. 46.10 (7), Stats., was created by ch. 336, Laws of 1935. This read as follows:

“46.10 (7) The actual per capita cost, as defined by rule of the state board of control, of maintenance furnished an inmate of any state institution, or any county institution in which the state is chargeable with all or a part of the inmate’s maintenance, may be recovered by the state board of control, or in counties having a population of five hundred thousand or more by the county, from such person, or from his estate, or may be recovered from the husband or wife, father, children or mother of such person. In any such action or proceedings the statutes of limitation shall not be pleaded in defense. . .

In 1938, Estate of Tinker, 227 Wis. 519, 279 N. W. 83, was decided by this court. It was there held, (1) that the provision in sec. 49.10, Stats., to the effect that the statute of limitations could not be pleaded in claims arising under that section was essentially a statute of limitations; (2) that it operated prospectively, rather than retrospectively; (3) that sec. 370.06, which provides that where an act containing a limitation is repealed and the repealing act contains a new limi *536 tation, the latter does not apply to rights and remedies accruing before the repealing act took effect, operates in favor of those resisting claims' of the state which arose prior to the amendment of 1941. The court thus held that as to actions accruing before the enactment in 1919 of sec. 49.10, the statute of limitations continued to run against the estate and could be pleaded in spite of the prohibition in that section.

By ch. 67, Laws of 1941, the provision in sec. 46.10, Stats., prohibiting the plea of the statute of limitations was deleted without creating any specific limitation on actions by the state.

In Estate of Heller, 246 Wis. 438, 17 N. W. (2d) 572, 18 N. W. (2d) 594, thi§ court, inconsistently with the theory of the Tinker Case, supra, held that sec. 46.10 (7), Stats., merely created a disability to plead the statute of limitations, without in any way affecting the bar of the statute, and that the amendment in 1941 simply removed this disability with the result that the statute of limitations was running during a period when it could not be pleaded. Upon rehearing the court abandoned this view, and applied the doctrine of the Tinker Case. Statutes prohibiting the pleading of an applicable statute of limitations, as well as those repealing the prohibition, are thus held to be essentially statutes of limitation. The basis of both the Tinker and the Heller Cases is that in the absence of a specific provision to the contrary the assumption is that the legislature did not intend a statute of limitation to operate retrospectively. There is also a dictum in the Heller Case to the effect that it is not competent for the legislature to cut off the right of the state to sue without providing for a reasonable time in which an action may be brought. In support of this proposition the opinion cites Osborn v. Jaines, 17 Wis. *573.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.W.2d 504, 249 Wis. 531, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-public-welfare-v-cameron-wis-1946.