State ex rel. Skeffington v. Seigfried

168 N.W. 62, 40 N.D. 57, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 63
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 N.W. 62 (State ex rel. Skeffington v. Seigfried) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Skeffington v. Seigfried, 168 N.W. 62, 40 N.D. 57, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 63 (N.D. 1918).

Opinions

Bruce, Ch. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying a peremptory writ of mandamus, which was entered after a demurrer to the answer had been overruled. This opinion is written after rehearing. The question involved is whether the board of trustees of the Soldiers’ Home at Lisbon, North Dakota, must admit to the privileges of the home one who has adequate means of support and to the detriment of others who have not such means; or whether, on the other hand they may make reasonable rules and regulations, which shall prevent the home from being overcrowded, and where, on account of lack of room and facilities, admittance must be denied to some, they may favor those who are most in need. Incidentally there is involved the validity of a rule of the board which limits the use of the home “to veterans not having an annual income of over $400 from all sources, including pensions, rent of houses, farm interest, etc.”

We are satisfied that the trial judge was justified in denying the writ of mandamus, and that the facts which are disclosed by the answer and the truth of which are admitted by the demurrer fully justify the trustees in denying the use of the home to the relator. We do not desire, however, to be understood as unquestionably approving the rule which has been adopted by them and which limits the use of the [61]*61home in all eases to those “not having an annual income of over $400 from all sources, etc.”

Whether this rule would be justified or not would depend upon the circumstances and the demand for the accommodations furnished by the institution. We are satisfied, indeed, that the object of the legislature was to furnish a home for “all honorably discharged soldiers, sailors, and marines,” their wives and widows, who might apply for its aid, and on account of old age or sickness desire its support and companionship or comfort, and this regardless of their financial situation.

We are equally satisfied that, although § 1776, Compiled Laws 1913, states that the object of the Soldiers’ Home shall be to provide a home and sustenance for all honorably discharged soldiers, § 1781, Compiled Laws 1913, which places the general management and control of the institution in the hands of the board of trustees, with the power to make rules and regulations in relation thereto, gave to that board the power to make rules of admission as well as of government, and, when facilities were not at hand to accommodate all, to so manage the institution that those really in need should fix-st be benefited. It is clear, indeed, that the alleviation of distress was the prime purpose of the gift, and it woxxld be absurd to contend that, where two ax’e equally entitled to a benefaction, he who has the right to determine which shall possess it cannot give it to the one most in need.

The Soldiers’' Home at Lisbon was established by the legislature under the provisions of § 216 of article 19 of the Constitution of North Dakota, which provides among other things that:

Section 216. “The following named public institutions are hereby permanently located as hereinafter px-ovided, each to have so much of the x-exnaining grant of one hundred and seventy thousand (170,000) acres of land made by the United States for ‘other educational and charitable institutions’ as is allotted by law, viz.:

“First: A soldiers’ home when located, or such other charitable institution as the legislative assembly may determine, at Lisbon, in the county of Kansom, with a grant of forty thousand (40,000) acres of land.”

The 40,000 acres of land in question were part of the Federal grant, [62]*62which, was made by § 17 of the Enabling Act, and which among other-grants gave to the state of North Dakota:

“Eor the school of mines 40,000 acres; for the reform school 40,000-acres; for the deaf and dumb asylum 40,000 acres; . . . for the-state normal schools 80,000 acres; for public buildings at the capital of said state 50,000 acres; and for such other educational and charitable purposes as the legislature of said state may determine 170,000 acres; in all 500,000 acres.”

Under the sanction of the constitutional provision in question the Soldiers’ Home was located at Lisbon, North Dakota, and by § 1770 of the Compiled Laws' 1913, which originally appeared as chapter 165 of the Laws of 1890, it was provided that “the object of the Soldiers’ Home shall be to provide a home and subsistence for all honorably discharged soldiers, sailors, and marines who have served in the Army or Navy of the United States, and who are disabled by disease, wounds, old age, or otherwise, and their wives and widows.”

Section 1777 also provides that “no applicant shall be admitted to such home who has not been a resident of this state at least one year next preceding his application for admission therein, unless he served in a Dakota regiment or was accredited to the territory of Dakota.”

By the same act the management of the Home was placed in the hands of a board of commissioners, and later, and by §§ 1778, 1779, and 1781 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, was placed in the hands of a board of trustees. These latter acts prescribe the power of the board of trustees and, among other powers, give to them the power to “make rules and regulations not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States or of this state for the management and government of such homes, including such rules as it shall deem necessary for the preservation of order, 'enforcing discipline and preserving the health of its inmates.”

It was under the provisions of the above act that the board refused admission to the plaintiff. Its reason for so doing is stated in the answer to the petition, and the facts therein pleaded are admitted by the demurrer.

This answer stated that the relator, although suffering with paralysis and confined to his bed and unable to care for himself, and having a wife who was advanced in years, physically frail and somewhat in[63]*63firm, so that she could not properly care for him without impairing her health, was the owner of at least 480 acres of land in Ransom county, North Dakota, free of encumbrance, and of sixteen lots in Lisbon, on which he occupied a substantial and comfortable home, fitted with, electric lights and other modern conveniences; that said lands were worth not less than $50 an acre; that said city lots, with the buildings thereon, were worth not less than $2,000; that the rents and profits of the relator’s real estate were at least $500 a year; and that in addition thereto the relator drew a pension of $30 a month from the United States. Its answer further stated that the Soldiers’ Home has only accommodations for about forty-five old soldiers, and hospital facilities for not to exceed nine, and that where old soldiers and their wives are admitted to the home the trastees are compelled to keep them in the hospital building, there being no other facilities; that the relator would have been a hospital case, and that to admit him would mean that indigent- and destitute old soldiers, their wives, and widows, would be deprived of the home and sustenance provided for them by law, and of the care and attention which they so much need and which relator is abundantly able to and does provide for himself, in his own. comfortable home surrounded by his wife and several sons and daughters, — all comfortably well to do.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 N.W. 62, 40 N.D. 57, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-skeffington-v-seigfried-nd-1918.