State v. Heupel

210 N.W. 275, 114 Neb. 797, 48 A.L.R. 728, 1926 Neb. LEXIS 107
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1926
DocketNo. 25292
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 275 (State v. Heupel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Heupel, 210 N.W. 275, 114 Neb. 797, 48 A.L.R. 728, 1926 Neb. LEXIS 107 (Neb. 1926).

Opinion

Eberly, J.

This is an action originally brought by the state of Nebraska in the county court of Lancaster county against Leah Heupel, incompetent, and Ira Birt, her guardian, to recover for the support and maintenance of said Leah Heupel in the state hospital for the insane at Lincoln, Nebraska, by virtue of section 6928, Comp. St. 1922, which reads as follows:

“If any patient be possessed of an estate or income sufficient to meet the expense of his care and maintenance in said hospital without depriving of necessary support those, if any, dependent upon such patient, then the guardian of such patient shall be required to pay to the superintendent of the hospital, quarterly. during the stay of such patient therein, a sum to be fixed by the board of commissioners of state institutions in an amount as nearly as may be equal to the per capita cost of maintaining such hospital, and said sums shall constitute a claim against the estate of such patient and be collectible therefrom.”

The facts concerning which there is no dispute are these: Leah Heupel was adjudicated insane and committed to the state hospital at Lincoln, Nebraska, in February, 1918, and is still confined there. Her mother was confined in the [799]*799same institution for many years, but was recently released at the age of 50 years. She does not appear as dependent upon her daughter for support. The father of Leah Heupel died in April, 1921, and left his daughter, Leah, an estate of $4,100, the approximate gross income from which is $190 per annum. Out of this must be paid state and county taxes, fees for guardian, and upkeep of property. The state in this suit seeks to collect a fixed fee of $16.10 per month or $193.20 per annum for the maintenance of Leah Heupel.

It is not questioned but that the charges made are reasonable and just and are not simply an arbitrary exaction. Consequently the net income from the estate is not sufficient to pay this claim against it and a portion of the indebtedness will have to be paid out of the principal.

It was contended by defendant in the county court and also in the district court that, properly construed, the word “or” in the statute quoted should be construed as “and,” which would limit the recovery of this state to the amount of the net income; also, that section 6928, Comp. St. 1922, is unconstitutional and void, for the reason that the amendatory act upon which the state relies contained more than one subject, which is in violation of the Constitution of the state of Nebraska; and that the amendatory act itself purported to amend an unconstitutional law, declared so by this court in Baldwin v. Douglas County, 37 Neb. 283.

From a determination on appeal of this cause to the district court favorable to the state, and the entry of a judgment against the defendant in the sum of $568.81 and costs, an appeal is prosecuted to this court, where the issues above outlined are again presented.

As to the defendant’s contention that the words of the statute, “If any patient be possessed of an estate or income sufficient to meet the expense of his care, * * * then the guardian of such patient shall be required to pay,” shall be construed as though reading, “If any patient be possessed of an estate and income sufficient to meet the expense of his care,” it is to be observed that the language of this statute is plain and unambiguous. Its meaning is [800]*800not at all uncertain. It conflicts with no other act. While we have no quarrel with the principle of construction for which the defendant contends, the question here is whether the facts in the instant case are such as require its application. It would seem not.

It is to be remembered that in the construction of a statute the language employed in it should generally be given its plain, obvious import. Simmerman v. State, 14 Neb. 568. This rule has been stated in other words: “Where the words of a statuté are plain, direct, and unambiguous, no interpretation is needed to ascertain their meaning; a mere reading will suffice.” Stoppert V. Nierle, 45 Neb. 105. It would seem that the principle announced in the case last ' cited is controlling in the present ease, and that the statutory provision in question, if otherwise valid, sustains the plaintiff’s recovery.

So far as the amendatory act containing more than one subject is concerned, defendant’s argument is fully answered in State v. Badberg, 108 Neb. 816.

The remaining contentions of the defendant herein are almost wholly based upon the doctrines announced by this court in Baldwin v. Douglas County, supra, and are due to a situation supposed to have been created by that opinion. It may be observed that this case is admittedly a pioneer case. It has never been accepted in any jurisdiction other than our own, and even this court has substantially repudiated its doctrines.

In Kearney County v. Elsam, 81 Neb. 490, the following language is employed by Good, C.: “In Baldwin v. Douglas County, 37 Neb. 283, this section of the statute was held to be unconstitutional, at least to the extent that it seeks to hold the relatives of insane persons liable for the support, care and maintenance of the insane persons while in the asylum. That action, however, was begun in 1889, and was tried and judgment rendered in the district court for Douglas county prior to the enactment of this section in its present form, though the opinion in the supreme court was written long after the passage of the act. This fact seems [801]*801to have been overlooked by the writer of the opinion in that case. That' action was brought to recover for the support, maintenance and care of an inmate of the asylum. It will be observed that the section itself exempts the estate of the insane person and the relatives from the costs of board, care and treatment, which shall be born by the state. It does not appear to the writer of this opinion that it was necessary to determine or consider the constitutionality of this section of the statute in that case. It appears that the section itself denied the very right to recover for the items sought to be recovered in that action, so that it was wholly unnecessary to declare this section unconstitutional in order to defeat a recovery. In addition, we may say that the reasoning which led to holding this section unconstitutional does not appeal to us as sound. Under the circumstances, we regard the opinion in the Baldwin case as of doubtful authority as a precedent to be followed. We have, therefore, disregarded the Baldwin opinion, and will proceed upon the assumption that the section is not unconstitutional in so far as it seeks to make the estates of insane persons liable for any sum paid by the county in their behalf.”

The basic reasoning upon which the decision above referred to proceeds is that because the state may pay the expenses involved in the care and maintenance of an insane person, requiring the county to reimburse it, and the county, in turn, being permitted to look to the estate of an insane person for indemnity for the payment made, the' taxation is triple, and wholly ignores the patent fact that the payments by the county and state are, in effect, but loans and advancements and do not constitute a real burden upon the estate under state and county taxes. In the final event-the estate of the insane as taxpayer bears no larger burden than it would if it paid direct upon demand to the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 275, 114 Neb. 797, 48 A.L.R. 728, 1926 Neb. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-heupel-neb-1926.