Town of Wilmington v. Town of Somerset

35 Vt. 232
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 Vt. 232 (Town of Wilmington v. Town of Somerset) 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 Wilmington v. Town of Somerset, 35 Vt. 232 (Vt. 1862).

Opinion

Pierpoint, J.

The important question in this case depends upon the construction of the 9th clause of the 1st section of the 17th chapter of the Compiled Statutes, (General Statutes, p, 132,) relating to the settlement of paupers, in connection with the facts stated in the-exceptions. In said clause it is provided that “upon the division of any town, or the annexation of a part of one town to another town, every person having a legal settlement therein, but being absent at the time of such division or annexation, and not having acquired a legal settlement elsewhere, shall have his legal settlement in that town, wherein his [234]*234last dwelling place or home shall happen to fall, upon such division or annexation.” It seems to have been the intention of the legislature by this enactment, to establish a definite rule, by which the controversies might be settled, that would be likely to arise upon the division of a town, or the annexation of a part of one town to another, as to the legal settlement and future support of the class of persons referred to. The rule is an arbitrary one, like all the laws relative to the support of paupers,.consequently but little aid, in its construction, can be derived from the consideration of any principles of equity, or justice, that may be supposed to exist as between the several towns to be affected by it.

This statute makes no reference to the effect of such division or annexation upon those persons whose “ dwelling place or home ” is in the divided town, or in the annexed portion of a town, at the time of such division or annexation ; but such persons aré left to the operation of the general principle applicable to such 'cases. The rule established in such cases in the neighboring átates, (as shown by the adjudged cases to which we have been referred in the argument,) whose pauper laws are similar to our own, seems to be, that such persons stand in the same relation to the town to which the territory in which they lived was annexed, as regards their settlement therein, as they occupied to the town from which such territory was taken, there being no express statutory provision on the subject. Probably a similar rule would be held to prevail here, but that point we are hot now called upon to decide.

That part of the statute now under consideration applies only to that class of persons who, having a legal settlement in the town that is divided, or a part of which is annexed to another, aré absent When the division or annexation takes place ; and of such person's it is'declared that they shall have their legal settlement in that town wherein their last dwelling place or home shall happen to fall. This statute will admit of no other reasonable construction than that the towns referred to, are those Whose territorial limits are altered by such division or annexation ; the indirect purpose was, to establish a basis upon which the settlement of this class of persons and the consequent burden of their support, if necessary, should be distributed between [235]*235such towns after their boundaries are so changed, and that is accomplished by fixing their settlement in the one town or the other, according to the place where the last dwelling place or home of the absent person shall be found to have been.

It appears from the agreed settlement of facts, that the pauper^ Thankful Sawtell, had a legal settlement.in Somerset, at the time a part of that town was annexed to the town of Wilmington, and that she always resided and had her home in that part of the town of Somerset that was so annexed to Wilmington, until 1844, when she became a town pauper and was wholly supported by the town. From this time forward the town of Somerset continued to support the pauper, sometimes in Somerset and some of the time out of said town, until the 1st of January, 1859,-when the act annexing a part of Somerset to Wilmington took effect. At that time she was living with one King in the town of Wardsboro, who was supporting her there for, and as a pauper of, the town of Somerset.

Upon these facts the question arises whether the pauper on the first of January, 1859, was such an absent person as is referred to in the statute, so that by operation thereof her legal settlement became fixed in that town within the then limits of which her last dwelling place or home was.

It is well settled that while she was being supported by the town of. Somerset, she could not have a residence in any other place within the meaning of that term, as used in the statutes regulating the settlement of paupers. Her living in any other town, no matter for how long a period, would not give her a settlement therein. Her residence in contemplation of law* would still be in the town from which she derived her support. She could not even “ come to reside ” in any other town while so supported there by the town of Somerset,, so as to be made the subject of an order of removal.

'Neither can such pauper, while in the charge of the overseer of the poor, and supported by the town of Somerset, have a “ dwelling place or home,” within the meaning of those words as used in that part of the statute now under. consideration,. [236]*236The dwelling place or home here referred to is evidently one that the pauper has obtained, procured, or occupied, of his own will, or- through some voluntary agency of his own, or that of 'connections or friends, a place of abode that can properly be called his, in the selection or enjoyment of which he may be supposed to have been a free agent, or at least one that he was allowed to occupy and enjoy as his home, independent 'of the compulsory charity, of the town.

Paupers while in charge of the overseer of the poor, or being supported by the town, have no choice as to the place where they live. They abide where the town provides a place. They are wholly subject to the will and control of the overseer of the poor in this respect. There is no particular place that they can call their home. If one of the paupers of Somerset had been kept by the town on that part set to Wilmington, or if they had all been kept there in a poor house procured by the town for that purpose, the annexation would not transfer such pauper or paupers. Such a case then would be no such connection of the paupers with the territory by virtue of a residence there, or as being inhabitants of it, as is necessary in order that a transfer of the territory should operate to transfer their legal settlement in Somerset, or to transfer them as inhábitan's of such territory, to the town of Wilmington. If their settlement is transferred at all, it must be by virtue of some other principle.

This point is fully decided in several cases in Massachusetts and Connecticut, which have been referred to in the argument, and it is not necessary to refer to them again here.

In this case the pauper was not upon the territoi-y transferred, or within the town of Somerset, at the time of annexation, but was in fact in the town of Wardsboro.

That the pauper was absent from the town of Somerset on the 1st of January, 1859, in fact, must be conceded, but it is said that being a pauper and supported by the town, at the time, she is to be regarded in law as in the town and not absent, and that the statute has reference only to those persons who, having a legal settlement in a town, are absent therefrom, under such circumstances that a new settlement might be gained [237]*237in another town by remaining therein a sufficient length of time.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Vt. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-wilmington-v-town-of-somerset-vt-1862.