Waushara County v. Calumet County

298 N.W. 613, 238 Wis. 230, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 36
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 613 (Waushara County v. Calumet County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waushara County v. Calumet County, 298 N.W. 613, 238 Wis. 230, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 36 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

Fowler, J.

Proceedings were instituted by Waushara county pursuant to sec. 49.03 (8a), Stats. 1939, to recover from Calumet county an amount expended by the plaintiff county for public relief furnished to Frederick Heffner as a nonresident poor person for the support of himself and family. It is not in dispute that the amount claimed was expended or that Heffner was a poor person entitled to relief when the relief was furnished. The sole question for determination is, *232 In which county did Heffner have a legal settlement when the relief was furnished?

On April 26, 1937, Heffner had a legal settlement in Waushara county. He was then living at Red Granite with his wife and family of three small children, with his wife’s parents, and there had his household goods. At that time he was being furnished public relief as a poor person by the public authorities and continued to be furnished such relief by them until May 27, 1937. On April 26, 1937, Heffner began working on a farm for a Mr. Duchow in the town of Rantoul, in Calumet county. He was paid $30 per month in summer and $35 in winter and furnished room and board, without any definite term of service being fixed. He then thought his work there would be temporary. He took only his work clothes with him and left his wife and family and household goods and part of his clothing with the wife’s parents. He had an automobile and went from Duchow’s to visit his family seventy miles away every two weeks or so. This continued until June 6, 1937, when he moved his family and household goods into a near-by house on another farm owned by Duchow for which he paid Duchow $5 a month rent. He continued to get his meals with Duchow but spent his nights with his family. Duchtiw sold this farm and had to give possession March 15, 1938. . No other house near was available to Heffner, and his wife had epileptic fits and could not be left entirely alone. He moved his family and household goods back to his wife’s parents on March 12, 1938, where she could receive care as needed from her mother. Heffner testified that while with Duchow he considered his “home” in Waushara county. He left Duchow’s employ and rejoined his family at his father-in-law’s on August 29, 1938. He received no public relief, from May 27, 1937, to August 29, 1938, a period of one year and about four months.

On these facts the welfare department concluded that Heff-ner became a resident of Calumet county the day he went to *233 work for Duchow; that from then on until he left Duchow’s he remained a resident of said county; that as he remained such resident for more than a year without receiving poor relief, he had acquired a legal settlement in Calumet county when he rejoined his family at Red Granite, and Waushara county was entitled to recover from Calumet county for relief furnished a nonresident poor person the sums thereafter furnished him, and an order was entered directing such reimbursement and reimbursement by the town of Rantoul to Calumet county.

Sec. 49.03 (8a), Stats. 1939, conferred on the industrial commission the adjustment of claims by a county furnishing aid to nonresidents thereof against the county of their residence under sec. 49.04, Stats. Ch. A 58, Stats. 1939 (ch. 435, Laws 1939), subsequently enacted, transferred this jurisdiction to the newly created state department of public welfare. Pursuant to this transfer the instant proceeding was duly brought before that department. The statutes governing the duty and liability for the support of Heffner are in substance as follows:

Sec. 49.01, Stats., imposes on every town the duty to “relieve and support all poor and indigent persons lawfully settled therein.”
Sec. 49.02 (4), Stats., provides that “every person of full age who shall have resided in any town .... in this state one whole year shall thereby gain a settlement therein; but no residence of a person in any town . . . while supported therein as a pauper . . . shall operate to give such person a settlement therein.”
Sec. 49.02 (7), Stats., provides that “every settlement when once legally acquired shall continue until it be lost or defeated by acquiring a new one ... or by voluntary and uninterrupted absence from the town ... in which such legal settlement shall have been gained for one whole year or upward; and upon acquiring a new settlement or upon the *234 happening of such voluntary and uninterrupted absence all former settlements shall be defeated and lost.” It is to be noted that the absence of Heffner from Red Granite was not “uninterrupted.”
Sec. 49.04, Stats., provides “the county board of each county shall have the care of all poor persons in said county who have no legal settlement in the town . . . where they may be, except as provided in sec. 49.03, and shall see that they are properly relieved and taken care of at the expense of the county.”
Sec. 49.03 (1), Stats., provides that “when any person not having a legal settlement therein . . . shall be in need of relief as a poor person . . . the town board . . . shall provide such assistance to such person as it may deem just . . . and order the same to be paid” out of the treasury of such municipality.

Sub. (2) of sec. 49.03, Stats., provides that the expense incurred pursuant to sub. (1) above shall be a charge against the county and paid out of the county treasury, and if the person to whom the relief is furnished shall not have a legal settlement within the county it may be recovered from the county of his legal settlement and such county may recover from the town of the person’s legal settlement.

The question under these statutes is, Did Heffner by going to the town of Rantoul and remaining there for over a. year under the circumstances stated lose his legal settlement in Red Granite and acquire a new one in the town of Rantoul?

The fact that he himself remained voluntarily away for more than one year from Red Granite without receiving relief did not defeat his legal settlement at Red Granite if his residence at Rantoul was for less than one year. ■ His family was at Rantoul for less than a year, and if his residence was that of his family under subs. (4) and (7) of sec. 49.02, Stats., his stay at Rantoul did not gain him a legal settlement or defeat his legal settlement at Red Granite.

*235 On this precise point only two cases are called to our attention that seem to us to have bearing upon it. One is Topsham v. Lewiston, 74 Me. 236, 238. In the opinion in this case it is stated:

“When a residence has once been established by the concurrence of intention and personal presence, continuous personal presence thereafter is not essential to a continuous residence, especially whén he whose residence is in question has a family between whom and him the mutual family relations are in full force; for absences of longer or shorter periods for temporary purposes, do not change the established home at which the family continue to reside with the consent of its head. Knox v. Waldoborough, 3 Maine, 455.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 613, 238 Wis. 230, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waushara-county-v-calumet-county-wis-1941.