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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Special Case for J. D. Kirkwood (Inspector of Poor of Parish of Govan) v. Hugh Manson (Inspector of Poor of Parish of Dailly) [1871] ScotLR 8_425 (14 March 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0425.html Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 8_425, [1871] SLR 8_425 |
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Page: 425↓
Held ( diss. Lord Deas), That a derivative settlement acquired by marriage belongs to a woman only while she retains the status of wife or widow of the man from whom it is derived, and is destroyed, not suspended, by a second marriage; and that on the dissolution of that second marriage, though her maiden settlement may revive, that derived from her first husband does not.
Question, Whether a residential settlement belonging to a woman in her own right, and not derivatively, is extinguished or only suspended by marriage?
The following Special Case was presented to the First Division of the Court of Session by the
Page: 426↓
Inspectors of the Poor of the Parishes of Govan and Dailly, in the question between the said parishes as to the parochial settlement of Catharine Straiton or M'Gerry or M'Geachy, a pauper presently chargeable to the parish of Govan, and of her family. The facts were stated as follows:—“In the beginning of May 1865, Dennis Gerry or M'Gerry died in the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. He was a native of County Down, Ireland, hut, at the date of his death, had an existing settlement in the parish of Dailly, by a residence in that parish for eight years, ending at Martinmas 1862. At the date of his death Gerry's residence was in the parish of Govan. He left in that parish a widow, Catherine Straiton or Gerry, aged thirty-three years, a native of said County Down, to whom he had been married in 1851 or 1853, and who had all along resided with him. She had no settlement in Scotland other than that acquired by her husband in Dailly. He also left six lawful children; two horn in the parish of Dailly, one in the parish of Girvan, and two in that of Govan. On 26th May 1865, three weeks after Gerry's death, his widow applied to the Parochial Board of Govan for relief for herself and children, which was at once afforded. Govan claimed repayment of said advances and relief from Dailly, as the parish of settlement. The Parochial Board of Dailly admitted liability, and afforded relief to the said Catherine Straiton or Gerry for herself and children, at varying rates of aliment as circumstances required, from said 26th May 1865 down to January 1868. On 8th January 1868 the said Catherine Straiton or Gerry contracted a second marriage with James M'Geachy, a native of County Donegal, Ireland, who had only been a short time resident in Scotland, and had not acquired any settlement in Scotland; and on 10th January 1868 she was, in respect of this marriage, struck off Dailly poors-roll. Dailly parish gave no relief to her or her children after December 1867. M'Geachy took up his abode in the house formerly occupied by his wife in the parish of Govan, and they continued to reside there, supported by their own industry, till 19th November 1868, when M'Geachy, being unable to work from dropsy, applied to the parish of Govan for relief, for behoof of himself and his wife and family, which was accorded him, and continued down to his death on 29th May 1869. During all his chargeability, M'Geachy was, from the state of his health, unfit for removal to Ireland. On 1st June 1869 the said Catherine Straiton or Gerry or M'Geachy applied to the Parochial Board of Govan for relief for herself and children. She then had surviving five children by her first husband, and one by her second; the latter, however, died before the presenting of this Special Case. On this application of 1st June 1869 relief was afforded her, and she still continues chargeable. Intimation of this chargeability was sent to the Inspector of Poor of the parish of Dailly on 1st June 1869, and a demand made that the parish of Govan should be relieved of said chargeability by the parish of Dailly.
“The latter denied liability.”
The question of law laid before their Lordships was—“Whether the parish of Dailly is bound to relieve the parish of Govan of the burden of maintaining the said Catherine Straiton or Gerry or M'Geachy and her said children, or any and which of them V”
Watson, with him Trayner, for the parish of Govan, argued—That in May 1865 the pauper had a residential settlement in the parish of Dailly through her first husband Dennis M'Gerry. Unless she retains that she has no settlement at all in Scotland, for though in 1868 she was married a second time to a James M'Geachy, he was an Irishman, having no settlement in Scotland, and could therefore convey to her no Scotch settlement. There was no question raised as to whether the pauper had lost by non-residence her settlement in Govan (see Johnston v. Black, July 13, 1859, 21 D. 1293), and they submitted that Govan must be held liable on the proposition that a second marriage to a man who had no settlement in Scotland merely suspended the former one acquired under the first marriage, and that this latter revived on the death of the second husband. They referred to the case of Greig v. Adamson, March 2, 1865, 3 Macph. 575, but argued that the principle there laid down did not apply in the present case, as the circumstance that the second husband had no settlement in Scotland placed this in quite a different category. On the other hand, the cases of marriage with a foreigner are more nearly in point, as for instance those of Hay v. Skene, 13th June 1850, 12 D. 1019; and Thomson v. Knox, 28th June 1850, 12 D. 1112. Reference was also made to the cases of M'Crorie v. Cowan, March 7, 1862, 24 D. 723; and Carmichael v. Adamson, February 28, 1862, 1 Macph. 452.
Solicitor-General ( A. R. Clark), with him Lancaster, for the parish of Dailly, replied—That the mother alone must be looked upon as the pauper, and the true question therefore was whether she had a settlement in the parish of Dailly. Now, she never had in Scotland any settlement except that derived from her first husband. This, it is argued, subsists notwithstanding her second marriage, in such a way as to revive upon the death of the second husband. That is to say, during the second marriage there is absolute suspension, but upon the dissolution of that second marriage, the second husband having no settlement in Scotland, and the widow herself having no birth settlement in Scotland, the settlement acquired from the first marriage revives. Now, without in any way admitting that a residential settlement, at any rate one so acquired, can be suspended merely, it is clear that during the life of M'Geachy, the second husband, the pauper had a claim against his parish of settlement, and that only. That was in Ireland, and Govan had a right to remove M'Geachy and his wife and family to Ireland. They could not do this in consequence of the slate of his health, and so had to support them till his death. On that occurring, the pauper claims relief in her own right, and she must do so against the parish of settlement which M'Geachy left her. That is against some parish in Ireland. She is M'Geachy's widow, and not M'Gerry's, and all that Govan can do if it wants to obtain relief, is to remove her and her family to Ireland. As the substantive foundation of their case, they submitted that a residential settlement accruing to a woman by marriage is not suspended merely, but destroyed, by a second or subsequent marriage.
At advising—
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Since that date, Govan has continued to support the pauper and her children, but claims to be relieved by Dailly on the ground that the residential settlement which the pauper derived from her first husband as his widow was only suspended, but not extinguished, by her second marriage, and has revived by the death of her second husband.
This is a question of general application, and depending on clear principle.
I am of opinion that a derivative settlement acquired by marriage belongs to the woman only while she retains the status of wife or widow of the man from whom the settlement is derived. By her second marriage her status is entirely altered; she is a wife and not a widow, and has no settlement except such as her second husband possesses, and if he has no settlement she can have none. When the second husband dies her status is that of the widow of the second husband; and though her maiden settlement, if she has one, will revive, that which she once had derivatively and temporarily from her first husband was, in my opinion, finally lost by her second marriage, and the only settlement which she can have derivatively after her second marriage, whether as wife or widow, must be the settlement of her second husband.
Another and a very different question was glanced at in the course of the arguments of counsel, whether a residential settlement belonging to a woman in her own right, and not derivatively, is extinguished by her marriage, or is suspended only and will revive on the death of her husband? The answer to this last question depends on principles and considerations which have no application to the question stated in this case. I therefore refrain from giving any opinion on this last-mentioned question. But the question stated in the case I answer in the negative.
The widow, in June 1869, applied to Govan for aid, and received it. The question before us relates to the liability of Dailly to relieve Govan of the burden of supporting this pauper, now the widow of James M'Geachy, and her pupil children by her first marriage with Dennis M'Gerry.
The whole facts are well stated in the Special Case.
I am of opinion that we should answer the question in the negative. There is no separate question at present in regard to the pupil children. For the support of their mother, the widow of M'Geachy, I think that the parish of Dailly is not liable.
This woman, a native of Ireland, had no settlement in Scotland when she became the wife of M'Gerry; nor had M'Gerry any settlement in Scotland at that time. After this marriage, the
Page: 428↓
On this point I remain of the opinion which I have expressed in former cases, that a woman does not acquire for herself a settlement by her marriage, nor does she stante matrimonio acquire for herself personally a settlement by living in family with her husband while he is acquiring a residential settlement. Of her husband's settlement she gets the benefit. That benefit is hers, not in consequence of her acquiring for herself a settlement under the Poor Law Act, but in consequence of her personal status and rights being merged in that of her husband. She personally formed no relation with the parish; but to her husband she has become eadem persona, therefore she enjoys the benefit of his settlement.
It is important to bear in mind the distinction between a birth settlement, on the one hand, which is personal and abiding, following the person sicut umbra sequitur, and reviving or returning into view and effect as soon as other interposed settlements are lost; and, on the other hand, the benefit of a conjugal relation to a man who acquired a settlement—a benefit which is not personal from settlement, but derivative from marriage, and is not abiding, but available only while the woman is wife or widow of the man who has the settlement.
During the husband's life the wife has the benefit of his settlement in virtue of the social relation by which they are united. Misfortune may fall on her and her family, and evil days may come. The marriage relation, with its attendant claims on the parish, is to her, in the event of poverty, a protection. It is to her as the shadow of a great domestic rock beneath which, while marriage lasts, she dwells shielded against the evil day. Even on the death of her husband, she is during her widowhood viewed in law as retaining her right to relief in respect of the marriage relation. The law humanely continues or stretches out the protection over her and her children, so that in the benevolent construction of law she is held as continuing in her widowhood to dwell beneath the extended shadow of her husband's right.
But when her widowhood ceases, the protection of her marriage relation ceases also. She could not retain the benefit of that relation or that protection after she became the wife of another man. It does not, in my opinion, make any material difference that M'Geachy, the second husband, had no Scotch settlement. He was born in Ireland, and liable to be removed there.
If I am right in my view of the law applicable to this case, the liability of the parish of Dailly ceased, not because of the acquisition of another settlement, but because of her marriage to another man. That second marriage completely broke the tie between her and M'Gerry. But she herself had no settlement in Dailly, and no claim on Dailly except in respect of her marriage with M'Gerry; therefore, when the wife's tie and the widow's tie were both broken, the liability of Dailly was necessarily terminated.
We have nothing to do at present with any question in regard to removal to Ireland. The law has provided for it, and there is a discretion vested in the Parochial Board and the Board of Supervision to ensure the judicious and humane enforcement of the law.
Nor have we anything to do at present with the claims of the children. They are all pupils, and are not themselves in their own right the objects of parochial relief. They were, while their mother was a widow, burdens on her industry or her other means of subsistence. When she married a second time she passed with her children as burdens into the new marriage relation. Till the children emerge from pupilarity, and become,—as I hope they may not become,—paupers in their own right, there can be no separate case in regard to them for our consideration.
The Court accordingly answered the question in the negative.
Solicitors: Agents for the Parish of Govan— D. Crawford & J. Y. Guthrie, S.S.C.
Agents for the Parish of Dailly— M'Ewen & Carment, W.S.