Wiggins v. Babbitt

21 Ohio Law. Abs. 6, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1308
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1935
DocketNo 2506
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio Law. Abs. 6 (Wiggins v. Babbitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. Babbitt, 21 Ohio Law. Abs. 6, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1308 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

[7]*7OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

The petition in error sets up six grounds. The briefs of the parties are confined in the main to a discussion of the validity and constitutionality of the statute, §3482, GC, and the proceedings thereunder.

It is urged by counsel for plaintiff that the procedings were void because the plaintiff was given no notice nor summons of any hearing in Probate Court upon the complaint of defendant Babbitt before issuance of the warrant to Babbitt as superintendent; that an opportunity to be heard is a sine qua non of jurisdiction in the absence of which any judgment against-the plaintiff would be vitiated and, finally, that the court erred in the general charge in assuming that any validity should attach to the proceedings before the Probate Court, the issuance of the warrant thereon to transport plaintiff to Guernsey County because of failure of the court to observe the code of civil procedure requiring summons and service upon any action instituted in any court. Although the other grounds of error are not specifically discussed in the briefs, they are saved in the petition in error. We have the bill of exceptions, which is very meager.

As we interpret the claim of plaintiff it is that unless the proceedings under the code, §3482 GC, recognize the provisions of the civil code requiring the issuance of process on a party any order made in said proceedings is void; -that a denial of notice of the proceedings or summons upon a party before judgment is a denial of due process of law.

The sections of the code involved are [8]*8§§3481 and 3482, GC. §3481 GC in part provides:

“When complaint is made to the township trustees or to the proper officers of the municipal corporation that a person therein requires public relief or support, one or more of such officers, or some other duly authorized person, shall visit the person needing relief, forthwith, to ascertain his name, age, sex, color, nativity, length of residence in the county, previous habits and present condition and in what township and county in this state he is legally settled. The information so ascertained shall be transmitted to the township clerk, or proper officer of the municipal corporation, and recorded on the proper records. No relief or support shall be given to a person without such visitation or investigation, except that within counties, where there is maintained a public charity organization * * * which investigates and keeps a record of facts' relating to persons who receive or apply for relief, the infirmary superintendents, township trustees or officers of a city shall accept such investigation and information and may grant relief upon the approval and recommendation of such organization.”

Sec 3482 GC provides:

“When it has been so ascertained that a person requiring relief has a legal settlement in some other county of the state, such trustees or officers shall immediately notify the infirmary superintendent of the county in which the person is found, who, if his health permits, shall immediately remove the person to the infirmary of the county of his legal settlement. If such person refuses to be removed, on the complaint being made by the infirmary superintendent, the probate judge of the county in which the person is found shall issue a warrant for such removal, and the county wherein the legal settlement of the person is, shall pay all expenses of such removal and the necessary charges for relief * *

An examination of the pleadings heretofore recited discloses that the petition is grounded upon the breach of duty of the defendant Babbitt in instituting proceedings against plaintiff, securing warrant (hereon, and in removing plaintiff to Guernsey County and in removing plaintiff in contravention of the terms of the statute “if his health permits,” and with force and violence. There is no averment in the petition that the plaintiff is a resident of Guernsey County, Ohio. There is no claim in the petition that she had resided in Franklin County long enough to receive public relief and support, nor is there any denial that she had made application for relief, nor of any other of the averments of the complaint before the Probate Court,

The answer first brings into the case by averment the question of the settlement of the plaintiff, wherein it is averred that she has a legal settlement in Guernsey County, which is controverted by the reply.

If the burden of proof in this case is as the pleadings would indicate upon the question of residence, inasmuch as it is first averred by the answer of the defendant Babbitt and denied by the reply, it would be incumbent upon the defendant Babbitt to sustain the burden. If this is true, then we scan the bill of exceptions in vain for any proof whatsoever touching the settlement of the plaintiff.

Sec 3482 GC provides that when it has been so ascertained (that is, as provided in §3481 GC) that a person requiring relief has a legal settlement in some other county of the state, then the proceedings may be taken under §3482, GC. All that the bill of exceptions discloses is that there was testimony that defendant Babbitt “had been informed by benevolent relief authorities,” without naming them or indicating their location, that they (plaintiff and her family) were legal residents of Guernsey County, Ohio. It is obvious without comment that such testimony did not affirmatively meet the requirements of proof as to the settlement of the plaintiff if that burden was upon the defendant Babbitt. The record is without any affirmative competent probative evidence touching the residence or settlement of the plaintiff.

However, we are of opinion that the burden of proving action by defendant Babbitt, whereby plaintiff suffered damage, was upon the plaintiff. It must be - conceded that if the residence of the plaintiff was Guernsey County and not Franklin County, then she could not have been harmed by the action of Babbitt in removing her to Guernsey County, provided he did not use unnecessary force or did not take her when her health did not permit. These latter questions by the general verdict were determined against the plaintiff. There is no question but that on the record plaintiff was a poor person seeking relief.

It was then incumbent upon the plaintiff to carry the burden of showing that she was not a resident of Guernsey County. The record, being silent upon this matter, she fads of any proof which would tend to [9]*9disclose that she was prejudiced by the action of defendant Babbitt.

It might be urged in a technical sense that the mere action of the defendant Babbitt by the institution of the proceedings and upon the warrant without notice would require nominal damage. We doubt if this is tenable.

The nature of plaintiff’s action is not well defined, whether false imprisonment or malicious prosecution. The trial court seemed to treat it as an action for malicious prosecution and charged the jury upon the question of probable cause. Certainly if the action is false arrest, false imprisonment or malicious prosecution it must be grounded upon due process of law. The statute authorizing the filing of the complaint and the issuance of warrant to convey the poor person is not framed upon the theory that such removal is an arrest, else, clearly, specific provision would be .made for service of warrant, as provided in the code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio Law. Abs. 6, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-babbitt-ohioctapp-1935.