Wayne Township v. Brown

186 N.E. 841, 205 Ind. 437, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 95
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1933
DocketNo. 26,356.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 841 (Wayne Township v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne Township v. Brown, 186 N.E. 841, 205 Ind. 437, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 95 (Ind. 1933).

Opinion

Hughes, J.

This was an action by the appellee, as the assignee of a large number of accounts held by certain creditors of the appellant, which accounts were incurred by the appellant in administering the poor relief of the township.

The complaint was in five paragraphs. The appellant filed a demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint; the demurrer was overruled; the appellant refused to plead further and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for the amount sued for.

The complaint sets out five different situations pertaining to the poor‘relief in so many paragraphs as follows:

First: Claims on warrants and/or vouchers issued by the township trustee, same evidencing indebtedness of the township, which have been allowed by the county *440 commissioners and an attempt made to sell bonds to secure money to pay the claims, and which bonds failed to sell.

Second: Claims on warrants and/or vouchers issued by the township trustee, same evidencing indebtedness of township, which have been approved by the county commissioners but no attempt made to sell bonds for the reason that the procedure was deemed useless and the expense of same avoided.

Third: Claims on warrants and/or vouchers issued by the township trustee, same evidencing indebtedness of the township which have not been approved by the county commissioners and for which no bond issues were authorized to meet payment of same.

Fourth: Claims against the township not evidenced by warrants and/or vouchers, the merchandise and products being sold to the Wayne township commissariat, same being operated for the relief of the poor under provisions of chapter 50 of the Acts of 1932.

Fifth: Claims against the township not evidenced by warrants and/or vouchers, the merchandise and products being sold to Wayne township commissariat for the operation of said commissariat, which is being operated as above stated.

There are four main issues raised by the appellant as follows:

First: That the statutes provide for a method of administering poor relief, and as such the county and township are jointly responsible, and that the indebtedness for poor relief is a joint obligation of the two units.

Second: That the method provided by statute for administering poor relief is exclusive and must be followed and is a condition precedent to establishing liability upon either the township or county.

Third: That if there not be sufficient funds in the general fund of the county for advancement to the town *441 ship for payment of poor relief claims, the proper officers should levy taxes to pay said claims, and if not done they should be mandated; and that the obstacle to levy taxes should be corrected by the legislature, rather than the remedy sought by the appellee.

Fourth: That the Commissariat Act is unconstitutional.

In this state the poor relief is both a county and township system, as stated by appellee, each working in separate and different lines, depending upon the nature and kind of relief that must and is required. to be extended.

Prior to May 15, 1901, poor relief was a county system and duty exclusively. Revised Statutes 1881, Section 6069.

Since May 15, 1901, it has been administered by the county as to certain activities and by the township as to others.

The county has the duty to maintain a county asylum and other charitable institutions permitted by law. It is the duty of the county to maintain in the county asylum persons lawfully settled in the county as may have been placed there by the overseers of the poor, and may contract with charitable institutions in the state for the relief and support of the poor placed there as a public charge. Section 12258, Burns R. S. 1926.

The statute provides that the overseer of the poor in each township shall have the oversight and care of all poor persons in his tov/nship so long as they remain a charge, and shall see that they are properly relieved and taken care of in the manner required by law. Section 12260, Burns 1926.

The overseer of the poor in each township is the township trustee. Section 12258, Burns 1926.

*442 Section 12258, Burns 1926, provides: . . The county council shall appropriate and the board of commissioners in each county shall advance to the township trustee the money necessary for the relief and burial of the poor in each township, which shall be accounted for and repaid to the county treasurer as hereinafter provided.”

Section 12291, Burns 1926, provides that: “When the township levies are made; the proper authorities of each township for the poor of which any such advancements have been made shall levy a tax upon the property of such township, to reimburse the county treasurer for payments made on such advancements, which taxes shall be collected as are other township taxes, and shall be paid into the county treasury. . . .”

Section 12266, Burns 1926, provides: “Whenever an overseer of the poor shall give aid, other than burial, medical relief, or assistance to children under the compulsory education law, to any poor person or family to the amount of fifteen dollars, it shall be unlawful for him to furnish any further aid to such poor person or family until he. shall have presented a statement of the case to the board of county commissioners, with a schedule stating the following facts. . . .”

The Act of 1931, page 66, provides: “That any civil or school township in the state being indebted, or hereafter becoming indebted, and whose indebtedness is or shall be, evidenced by bonds, notes, judgment or other obligations heretofore, or hereafter, issued, or negotiated by such township, or rendered against such township, may for the purpose of funding or refunding such indebtedness, or any part thereof, reducing the rate of interest thereon, extending the time of payment and canceling so much thereof as may be due or shall hereafter become due, by the vote of two-thirds of the members of the township advisory board, and with the ap *443 proval of the township trustee, issue its bonds, with interest coupons attached, for an amount not exceeding in the aggregate the whole amount of indebtedness of such township; . . . . The township advisory board and the township trustee of such township shall add, or cause to be added, in addition to any tax otherwise provided by law, to the tax duplicate of such township a levy sufficient to pay the yearly interest on such bonds and also not less than five cents on the hundred dollars tax valuation to provide a sinking fund for the liquidation of the principal when it shall become due; which sinking fund, together with the interest increase or profit thereon, shall be applied solely to the payment of such bonds.”

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 841, 205 Ind. 437, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-township-v-brown-ind-1933.