Town of Marshfield v. Town of Cabot

180 A. 897, 107 Vt. 409, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 1, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 180 A. 897 (Town of Marshfield v. Town of Cabot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Marshfield v. Town of Cabot, 180 A. 897, 107 Vt. 409, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 192 (Vt. 1935).

Opinion

Slack, J.

This is assumpsit under our pauper law to recover for money expended for the burial of Mrs. Oliver King. On facts found, plaintiff had judgment, and the case is here oh defendant’s exceptions.

The material findings are these: On April 30, 1930, King had a “legal pauper residence” in Cabot; that day he moved, with his family, to Marshfield where he resided continuously to the time Mrs. King died, in December, 1933. During that time neither he nor any member of his family requested aid or assistance from Marshfield. When his wife died King was a poor person in need of assistance, and called on Marshfield to defray her burial expenses, and it did. In May, 1932, King’s girl, about eight years old, injured a finger while playing in the Marshfield schoolyard. Her teacher took her to Doctor Corson in Plainfield, who found that immediate amputation of the finger was necessary. Knowing King and his ability to pay, the doctor refused to operate and take care of the case until the overseer of the poor for Marshfield agreed to pay for his services; and one Potter, Marshfield’s then overseer, upon being consulted by the doctor by telephone, agreed to do so. After the amputation, King and other members of his family took the girl to the doctor’s in Plainfield several times for treatment of her finger. The overseer requested King to pay the doctor’s bill and he refused, saying that he would not and could not. The overseer paid the same June 7, 1932, by a town order drawn by him. In May, 1932, King was poor and in destitute circumstances, but made no request on the overseer for assistance. It is also found that the day before the overseer drew the order to pay the doctor, the selectmen of Marshfield paid King $20 “in full payment for expense money paid out for Dorothy May King, injured in a swing and loss of her finger”; and that during the year'1932 the town paid King $107.25 for boarding one Nunn, a town charge.

The plaintiff did not attempt to collect the amount expended on account of the girl’s injuries from defendant, and it is not included in the judgment in this case. The only significance of that incident was to show that King had not acquired a residence in Marshfield at the'time of his wife’s death, and, consequently, that Cabot was liable for Mrs. King’s burial expenses. *415 The real issue, as defendant says in its brief, '“is whether the three years residence of the King family under the pauper statutes, in plaintiff town was interrupted by the transaction growing out of the King girl’s injury, and the payment by the plaintiff, on account thereof. ’ ’

Section 3923 of tlie Public Laws, so far as material, provides: “If a person is poor and in need of assistance for himself or family, the overseer of the poor of a town shall relieve such person or his family, when application for such assistance is made. * * * And if he has not resided in such town for three years, supporting himself and family, and is not of sufficient ability, to provide such assistance, the town so furnishing the same may recover the expense thereof in an action of contract, on this statute, from the town where he last resided for the space of three years, supporting himself and family.”

Subject to defendant’s exception, plaintiff was permitted to show by the doctor that he was paid for his services by a town order drawn by the overseer, and its date. It is claimed that this was incompetent as bearing on the pauper residence of King because the doctor’s services were not authorized by King or any member of his family, nor had any member of that family applied to the overseer of Marshfield for assistance. This evidence was admissible if the doctor’s services were rendered under such circumstances that Marshfield was liable therefor. We think they were. The girl required immediate attention; the doctor knew in a general way King’s financial condition; so did the overseer; the doctor informed the overseer what had happened and what was necessary, and the overseer thereupon authorized his services. Nothing appears to indicate that the overseer did more, or other, than the law required of him in the circumstances. P. L. 3919 provides that: “A town shall relieve and support poor and indigent persons residing or found therein, when they are in need thereof, ’ ’ etc. P. L. 3920 provides that the overseer of the poor shall have the care of such persons “and shall see that they are suitably relieved, supported, ’ ’ etc. The overseer’s duty to act was mandatory and ineludible when he received information, however, conveyed, that relief was required. Town of Walden v. Town of Cabot, 25 Vt. 522; Town of Weston v. Town of Wallingford, 52 Vt. 630; Town of Waitsfield v. Town of Craftsbury, 87 Vt. 406, 89 Atl. 466, Ann. Cas. 1916C, 387; Town of Hardwick v. Town of Barnard, *416 102 Vt. 330, 148 Atl. 408; Peabody v. Town of Holland, 107 Vt. 237, 178 Atl. 890. In the latter case, application for assistance for the poor person was made by a hospital located in plaintiff town. So the fact that neither King nor any member of his family applied for assistance does not avail defendant. This exception is without merit. This disposes of exceptions (a), (b), and (f). The record shows that the stub to the town order given the doctor was excluded, so exception (g) has no merit.

Subject to defendant’s exception (h), plaintiff’s overseer was permitted to testify that he consulted defendant’s overseer regarding the girl’s injury, but since he was not allowed to tell what either said this was harmless.

The remaining exceptions to the admission of evidence relate to evidence regarding King’s financial status in May, 1932. Whether the overseer’s determination that King’s condition at that time made a proper case for relief was final and conclusive as to Marshfield (See Holloway v. Town of Barton, 53 Vt. 300, a transient pauper ease), it was not as to Cabot. Town of Ripton v. Town of Brandon, 80 Vt. 234, 67 Atl. 541. As to the latter town, King’s then need of assistance was an open question.

While it is said in Town of Hardwick v. Town of Barnard, following Town of Bipton v. Town of Brandon, that, when a town, bona fide, relieves a person apparently a pauper and actually standing in need of relief, the town in which such person has the statutory residence, if given the required notice, will be liable for the expense, although it may turn out that the person relieved had some property, in Town of Cabot v. Town of St. Johnsbury, 94 Vt. 311, 317, 111 Atl. 454, this was held to apply only when, in the circumstances, what property such person has is not available for his immediate relief, or is manifestly disproportionate to his needs.

Doctor Corson testified that he knew where the Kings lived, and had been in the house; that the place was on a back road, probably a mile and one-half from Marshfield village, and not in very good condition, and that King had three or four children.

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Bluebook (online)
180 A. 897, 107 Vt. 409, 1935 Vt. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-marshfield-v-town-of-cabot-vt-1935.