Supervisors of Onondaga County v. Morgan

4 Abb. Ct. App. 335
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Abb. Ct. App. 335 (Supervisors of Onondaga County v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supervisors of Onondaga County v. Morgan, 4 Abb. Ct. App. 335 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Dentó, Oh. J.

[After stating the pleadings above.]—The

defendant’s counsel relies, in support of the demurrer, upon the general provisions of law by which the expense of maintaining prisoners in jail for criminal offenses, whether before trial or after conviction, is a. charge upon the county. The plaintiffs, on the other hand, insist that Tyler after his removal to the asylum was no longer in prison within, the meaning of [337]*337these provisions, but that his estate, in the hands of his com-, mittee, is liable for his support, according to the effect and fair meaning of the statute to organize the State asylum.

Section 31 of the act (L. 1842, c. 135) declares that persons who have escaped indictment or been acquitted of criminal charges on trial, on the ground of insanity, shall, after careful inqury by the court and the ascertainment of the fact, be ordered into safe custody and be sent to the asylum. It further provides that the county from which such a person is sent shall defray all his expenses while there, and of sending him back, if returned, and concludes as follows: “ But the county may recover the amount so paid from his own estate, if he have any, or from any relative, town, city or county that would have been bound to provide for and maintain him elsewhere.” The next section (section 32) declares that if any person in confinement under certain circumstances mentioned, including those “under a criminal charge ... or under any other than civil process,” shall appear to be insane, the first judge of the county shall institute a careful investigation, aided by the testimony of physicians and others; and that if, after an invitation to the district attorney, and by a jury if thought necessary, he be sasisfactorily proved to be insane, the judge is to discharge him from imprisonment “ and order his safe custody and removal to the asylum, where he shall remain until restored to his right mind; ” when, if the judge has so directed, information is to be given by the superintendent to the judge, the county clerk and the district attorney, so that he may be remanded to prison, and criminal proceedings may be resumed or he be discharged.

The section concludes as follows: “ The provisions of the last preceding section requiring the county to defray the expenses of a patient sent to the. asylum, shall be equally applicable to similar expenses arising under this section and the one next following.” Section 33, which is next in order, contains a similar provision as to persons imprisoned on civil process, attachment, or for non-payment of militia fine, and who shall become insane. A similar inquiry is to be made, and if insanity is found, the person is to be discharged from imprisonment and ordered into safe custody and sent to the asylum ; [338]*338“ nevertheless,” it is added, “ the creditor may renew his process, and arrest again his debtor* when of sound mind.” ■

It is conceded that the estate of the insane person is liable for his maintenance at the asylum in cases within section 31 such being the express language of the law; but it is argued that the words of reference in section 32, which embrace the case of Tyler, only incorporate the portion of the provisions which charge the county with the expenses, and not the part providing for a reimbursement from the estate, &c., of the person supported. The language is not perfectly explicit, and .a verbal interpretation may support the defendant’s-position. But I am of the opinion that the intention was to incorporate the whole of the provisions respecting the expenses at the ■asylum contained in section 31 into section 32, as well that one which furnishes the indemnity, as that which charges the county. The word provisions is put in a plural form, though the language imposing the charge in the first instance on the county is a single provision. In a general way it may be said that “the provisions of the last preceding section, requiring the county to defray the expenses of a patient sent to the asylum,” are those which require the county to advance the, amount in the first instance, and to be indemnified for the advance out of the estate of 'the patient, if he have any, and from the other sources indicated if he have none. The circumstance that the cases embraced in section 33 are placed in the same category with those in section 33, adds force, to this •construction. These are cases of imprisonment in civil suits, where the public were never bound to support the person imprisoned, even when in jail. It would be strange if he should be required to be maintained at the public expense in an asylum when he happened to become insane, though he had property to maintain himself.

This construction is further supported by section, 3G> which' is a general provision, embracing the expenses of- every insane - ■person supported in the asylum, without regard to the manner in which he was sent there, declaring that such person shall be ¡personally liable for these expenses. In terms it completely ■.covers the case of Tyler. If it can be taken out of that provision, it must be on.the ground that there is something in the [339]*339fact that he had been an offender against the laws before he became insane, which should exempt his property from the burden of his support. But surely we cannot impute any such policy to the legislature.

The case of People v. Supervisors of Genesee, 7 Hill, 171, has no application to this case. That was an attempt to charge a town in Genesee county with money paid by that county for the support of a person sent to the asylum; but as that person was not a pauper but a person in indigent circumstances only, it was held that the town was not liable for her support under any other circumstances, and as the act relating to the asylum did not give the county a remedy against the town in such cases, the proceeding by the county to pharge the town was not sustained.

I am in favor of affirming the j udgment.

Potter, J.

In 1842 an ac of the legislature was passed

entitled “An act to organize the State lunatic asylum, and more effectually to provide for the care, maintenance and recovery of the insane.” L. 1842, c. 135. This act, containing fifty-one sections, provided a general system in regard to all the insane to be cared and provided for at the State institution At the time of the passage of this act, there was in force, by virtue of title three, chapter twenty, part one of the Revised Statutes (1 B. S. G34), an act entitled “Of the safe keeping and care of lunatics,” containing certain other provisions in regard to that class of persons, There was also in force at the same time, by virtue of article ten, title two, chapter five, part two of the Revised Statutes (2 B. 8. 52), an act entitled, “ Of the custody and disposition of the estates of idiots, lunatics, persons of unsound mind and drunkards,” containing certain other provisions in regard to the same class of persons. These three statutes above referred to contain substantially all the statute provisions on the subject of lunatics, and all that are necessary to refer to in the examination of this case, except that such prior statutes also refer to the statutes in relation to the support of the poor, for the remedies and manner of enforcing their provisions, and to which last mentioned statutes, therefore, it may also be necessary to refer in this review. The act of 1842, in some of its sections, plainly refers to such [340]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Abb. Ct. App. 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supervisors-of-onondaga-county-v-morgan-ny-1865.