Court Opinion

ID: 6585943
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:43:40.884929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:28.141398
License: Public Domain

Powers, J.
The notice involved in this case is entirely inadequate. It reads as'follows:
Barnet, June 24, 1907.'
Overseer of Poor,
Plainfield, Vt.
Dear Sir:
We have a boy, of Chas. Bancroft, who is in the Waterbury asylum, who is a resident of your town, sick in the hospital at St. Johnsbury. He has had an operation of some kind, and his family have applied for help from this town. I will see that these bills are paid, and will look to the town of Plainfield for remuneration.
Tours very truly,
A. N. Gileillan,
Overseer of Poor,
Barnet, Vt.
The boy had his operation, or at least went to hospital June 8, and is there yet but will be out soon.
A. N. G.
*265The statute requires that the notice shall disclose the condition of the alleged pauper. The condition here referred to is his financial condition which is the basis of the right of recovery, and not his physical condition which is merely the cause of it. This was recognized in Randolph v. Roxbury, 70 Vt. 175, and made plain in Mt. Holly v. Peru, 72 Vt. 68. In the latter case, the notice described the party on account of whose assistance the suit was brought as a “poor person, unable to supply herself by her own labor and has no means of support and is being now cared for and supported by said Mt. Holly.” It was objected that the notice should have shown the cause of her need of support. In holding that the notice was sufficient, the Court said “nor was it necessary to mention Mrs. Lyons’s sickness in giving notice of her condition. The requirement relates to the condition which is the basis of recovery, and not to the circumstances producing that condition. If a person is poor and in need of assistance, the cause of this condition is immaterial.”
If we were to strike out of the notice here in question all that relates to young Bancroft’s physical condition, — which is immaterial under the above holding,' — we should have one not materially unlike that which was held insufficient in Essex v. Jericho, 76 Vt. 104.
This holding being decisive of the case, the other questions are not considered.

The pro forma judgment is reversed, and judgment rendered for the defendant to recover its costs.