Court Opinion

ID: 5257087
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 18:31:12.744887+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:28:01.798494
License: Public Domain

Clark, J.:
The relator was committed to the State Custodial Asylum at Newark, -N. Y., by the deputy commissioner, of charities of the city of New York on the 20th day of December, 1917. He signed the commitment as “ Deputy Commissioner, Supt. of the Poor for New York County,” but no question is raised as to the official position of William J. Doherty, who signed the commitment, and it will be presumed that he was qualified to act in the place of his superior. (People ex rel. Morse v. Travis, 224 N. Y. 625.)
The commitment recites that “ said Lillian James is a *800feeble-minded person ” and “is in indigent circumstances, and, as near as can be ascertained, of the age of 18 years.”
1 Relator’s mother sued out a writ of habeas corpus in December, 1918, charging that her daughter had been illegally committed to the Newark institution.
I The return to the writ set forth the fact that the relator was detained in pursuance of a commitment made by William J. Doherty, deputy commissioner of charities of the city of New York. No traverse to the return was filed until • after the hearing, but with her brief filed later, counsel for relator did submit a traverse, but it raised no issue of fact, so the inquiry before the Special Term was simply whether or not the deputy commissioner of charities of the city of New York had authority to make the commitment in the manner adopted in this case.
He unquestionably did have such authority by the express terms of section 52 of the State Charities Law (as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 843), and when he had such authority his decision cannot be reviewed here. (People ex rel. Hubert v. Kaiser, 206 N. Y. 46.)
• Appellant’s contention that section 461 of the State Charities Law (as added by Laws of 1914, chap. 361)* repeals section 52, is without merit. It does not attempt to repeal it in express terms, and does not repeal it by implication. The statutes are not inconsistent. One method of commitment is afforded by section 52 of the State Charities Law, and another method is afforded by section 461, and.they run concurrently.
The State is vitally interested in seeing to it that indigent persons are properly cared for. This young woman was an infant when committed, and was found to be in indigent circumstances, and the commissioner of charities of the city of New York, where she was found, was not obliged to wait the tedious process of a legal inquiry before seeing to it that she was properly cared for. (State Charities Law, § 52; People ex rel. Horton v. Fuller, 41 App. Div. 404.)
That being so, on the return of this writ, no issue of fact being raised by the traverse, it was the clear duty of the *801Special Term to dismiss the writ. Relator having been properly committed, the burden did not rest on respondent to offer proof that she was still in indigent circumstances in order to detain her.
If her circumstances had changed, or her mother was able to care for her, it was incumbent upon her to offer some proof to that effect on the return of the writ.
Respondent can stand on the commitment, it having been issued by an officer authorized to do so, and he should not be compelled to surrender on demand a party who had been lawfully committed to his charge.
If relator is not now indigent or feeble minded, she can easily offer proofs of these facts in another proceeding for her release. She having failed to raise any issue of fact by her so-called traverse to the return, the disposition of the matter in the court below was proper. (Ex parte Dean, 161 N. Y. Supp. 482; People ex rel. Horton v. Fuller, 41 App. Div. 404.)
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed.

 Since repealed by Mental Deficiency Law, § 39. See Mental Deficiency Law, § 23 el seq.—• [Rep.