Township of Equality v. Township of Star

274 N.W. 219, 200 Minn. 316, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 771
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 18, 1937
DocketNo. 31,287.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 274 N.W. 219 (Township of Equality v. Township of Star) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Township of Equality v. Township of Star, 274 N.W. 219, 200 Minn. 316, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 771 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*317 Julius J. Olson, Justice.

The appeal is from a judgment determining that the legal settlement for poor relief purposes of one Gunlekson was in defendant township. The suit was brought to establish such settlement pursuant to the provisions of 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 3161-2. The cause was heard by the court and findings made sustaining plaintiff’s position. As there is neither settled case nor bill of exceptions, our only concern is whether the findings of fact sustain the conclusions of law and the resulting judgment. Defendant fully realizes this situation, but insists that measured by this test the legal conclusion reached by the court is not so sustained.

The facts found may be thus summarized: Plaintiff township lies within Red Lake county, defendant within Pennington county. The township system of caring for the poor existed in both except that as to Pennington the county system existed between the first Monday in January, 1933, and the same day in January, 1935. The involved poor person has been unable to support himself over a period of years, in fact ever since 1930. At the time of the hearing he was 72 years of age. He regularly received aid from Star township as a poor person from 1930 until the county system in Pennington county was adopted. From that time and until April 1, 1934, he received aid from that county. The aid was in the form of monthly payments of definite amounts to the persons at whose homes he was living. His place of abode and legal settlement was in the town of Star until June 23, 1933, and has there remained unless changed later by the further facts found by the court. At that time and with the consent of the person having charge of poor relief for the county, he was taken to the home of one Krosen in plaintiff township, but Pennington county continued paying for his support. It is well also to note that next prior to June 23, 1933, he had actually lived in Polk county over a period of 21 months, but during all of that time he received aid as a poor person from the defendant township. The court also made this significant finding:

“That when Gunlekson moved to the Krosen home in Red Lake county, there was no intention to change his residence from Pen *318 nington county; and the move was made in the belief that aid would continue to be given by Pennington county or the town of Star.”

On April 1, 1934, the state emergency relief administration took over the poor relief of both counties. Krosen was paid for Gunlek-son’s support for April, 1934, through the Pennington county office. Through the Red Lake county office he was paid from May to December, 1934. Thereafter and until June, 1935, the Pennington county office made the payments, at which time the state administration in both counties was discontinued and the old system of caring for the poor was resumed. The present proceeding was begun in September, 1935. So the question presented is whether the aid received from the .state administration, upon the facts herein-before stated, should be construed as the equivalent of changing Gunlekson’s settlement for poor purposes from Star township to that of the plaintiff. The total number of months during which the state furnished the aid to this and other paupers in these counties was approximately 14 months. During that time Gunlekson was physically present at the Krosen home in plaintiff township. Defendant’s position is that as a matter of law, upon the facts stated, there was established a “settlement” of this poor person in plaintiff township and that the court was in error in holding otherwise.

Many cases have been before this court involving pauper settlement. Defendant cites several of them and seems to place its heaviest reliance upon Town of Smiley v. Village of St. Hilaire, 183 Minn. 533, 237 N. W. 416, 417, and State ex rel. Timo v. Juvenile Court, 188 Minn. 125, 246 N. W. 544, 545.

In the Smiley case the pauper had lived in various townships prior to the time the proceeding there involved was brought. Also important to note is the fact that in that case the township of Smiley (in which he was living when the proceedings were begun) was not involved on the appeal, the controversy being limited to the township of Rocksbury and the village of St. Hilaire. The facts there were that the pauper lived continuously for almost a year and a half in St. Hilaire, staying with one Johnson. This condition *319 existed until October 14, 1929, at which time Johnson moved to the township of Smiley, the pauper going with him and there remained until January 1, 1930, when he was removed to a hospital in Pennington county, where he remained until March 8, 1930. He then returned to “Johnson’s home in the town of Smiley, Avhere he Avas at the time of the commencement of this proceeding. No public aid had been received by Seelcmd [the pauper] at the time of the commencement of this proceeding.” (183 Minn. 534, 535.) The court, in Adew of these facts, came to the conclusion that the pauper in fact had a “settlement” in St. Hilaire as distinguished from a “fixed place or domicile” in Rocksbury, Avhere he had lived over a period of considerable time prior to the dates hereinbefore mentioned.

In the Timo case the question of “residence” as distinguished from “settlement” Avas thoroughly discussed. That case arose under the mother’s pension act. The distinguishing facts there appearing from those found in this case are [188 Minn. 127]:

“* * * on the date of her petition relator had been a resident of Wadena county for more than a year. All other conditions precedent established, she was entitled to an award if her residence in the county had continued there for a year or more. * * * There is no question of the right of the family, no one having objected, to remove from one county to the other. Neither is there question as to the fact or good faith of their intention to malee their home, and so establish residence, m Wadena county, when they moved there April 6, 1981. * ~ * Residence alone does not always make settlement. It is not enough to entitle a poor person to relief, other than temporary, in the town or county of residence at the time being. There must be the added elements necessary to convert that residence into settlement under the poor Iuavs.” (Italics supplied.)

The court thereupon discussed In re Settlement of Skog, 186 Minn. 349, 243 N. W. 384, pointing out the distinctions between the mother’s pension act and the laAv relating to paupers, amongst other things saying: “the mother’s pension statute is no part of our poor *320 law, although in result it provides public aid to the needy. The beneficiaries are the children rather than the mother. It contemplates an investment in youth, their education and proper upbringing, and so is prospective in operation, benefit, and social return to a degree not found in the poor laws.” (188 Minn. 128.)

The facts in this case are so essentially different from those presented in the two cases mentioned as to make them of little aid to a solution of our present problem.

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Bluebook (online)
274 N.W. 219, 200 Minn. 316, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/township-of-equality-v-township-of-star-minn-1937.