This is a bill in equity filed on November 27, 1957, by the board of health. The defendants appeal from a final decree permanently enjoining them from keeping swine on certain premises in Woburn and from transporting offensive substances through the streets of Woburn, without in each instance obtaining a permit as required by regulations of the board.
1
“Since the judge made no report of the material facts, the entry of the decree imported a finding of every fact essential to sustain it and within the scope of the pleadings.”
Marlowe
v.
O’Brien,
1. Although the board of health had authority to institute a suit for the city, it should have been brought in the name of the city. An amendment may be allowed for this purpose, even though the point is not now raised. See
Board of Health of Wareham
v.
Marine By-Products Co.
2. The board of health of a city or town, pursuant to at least three legislative delegations of power, may require a *549 permit for keeping swine. G. L. c. Ill, §§ 31, 122, 143, as amended. See §§ 146, 147, as amended. 2
The authority to make the regulation has usually been found in § 143, or in one of its predecessors. In
Quincy
v.
Kennard,
The regulations of the Woburn board of health were adopted April 27, 1953. When published, reference was made to §§ 31, 122, and 143, among other sections of c. Ill, as providing authority for the regulations.
Prior to St. 1920, c. 591, § 17, authority to regulate piggeries by a permit could have been found in the predecessors of §§ 122 and 143 (see R. L. c. 75, §§ 65, 91). Section 17, by enacting what is now c. Ill, § 31, provided a comprehensive, separate, additional source of authority for health regulations. The new section had been recommended by the commission (see St. 1919, c. 248) to complete the work of revising and codifying the laws relating to towns. Its report (1920 Senate Doc. No. 2, p. 14) said, “The provisions of law are such that considerable doubt has arisen with regard to the powers of the board of health to make regulations. In order to make matters clear the commission recommends the passage of section 24 of the general bill” (p. 27) 3 attached to the commission’s report.
In the present case, the board of health has not proceeded to enforce its regulation under §§ 143 and 146. No order of prohibition appears to have been served upon the defendants under § 146, which provides one method for enforcing a regulation adopted under § 143. We therefore consider *551 whether these regulations could have been adopted under § 31 and § 122, as well as under § 143, and whether, regardless of the section under which they were adopted, they can be enforced in equity under G. L. c. Ill, § 187, 4 without compliance with §§ 143 and 146.
In
Malden
v.
Flynn,
The requirement of a permit is a traditional method of regulation, and a regulation calling for a permit certainly may be adopted where there exists some statutory delegation of authority (as here may be found in § 143) to prohibit absolutely. See
Butler
v.
East Bridgewater,
The provisions of §§ 146 and 147 in terms apply only to orders under § 143. See
DeVincent
v.
Public Welfare Commn. of Waltham,
*553 3. The evidence would justify findings that the defendants moved some one thousand pigs to the premises here in question, purchased by them in late October or November, 1957, without obtaining a permit to keep them there.
Applications for permits to keep the pigs on these premises were not filed until February, 1958, nearly three months after this bill was filed. The board of health has taken no action on these applications.
Obviously, if the board of health should fail to act upon the defendants’ applications, the injunction ordered by the final decree would give to the board’s inaction the effect of a complete prohibition without the consideration by the board impliedly called for by the regulation. A board which has power to grant or withhold a permit must decide “in a fair, judicial and reasonable manner upon the evidence as presented . . . keeping in mind the objects” of the applicable regulation.
Butler
v.
East Bridgewater,
The defendants contend that the board of health was determined not to grant a permit to the defendants and that evidence to that effect was improperly excluded. See, however,
Swansea
v.
Pivo,
4. The decree is affirmed. The city is to have costs of this appeal.
So ordered.
Notes
The regulations, so far as here relevant, read: 1. “No individual or individuals . . . shall keep . . . swine within the limits of this municipality without first obtaining a permit from the [b]card of [h]ealth. All such permits shall expire on May 1st of each year unless sooner revoked. Any permit may be revoked at any time by the [b]card of [h"]ealth for cause. 2. A license to transport garbage, offal or other offensive substances along the public highways of this municipality must be obtained from the [T)]card of Lh]ealth in accordance with Chapter 111, Section 31A and no such materials shall be so transported without such a license.” (Then_ follow provisions as to the expiration and revocation of licenses and concerning manner of transporting such materials.) The regulations contain fifteen additional sections regulating the conduct of such piggeries as may be permitted at all.
Section 31, as amended through St. 1937, c. 285, reads: “Boards of health may make reasonable health regulations. All regulations . . . shall be published once . . . and such publication shall be notice to all persons. Whoever . . . violates any reasonable health regulation, made under authority of this section, . . . shall be punished by a fine of not more than twenty dollars.”
Section 122 reads: “The board of health shall examine into all nuisances, sources of filth and causes of sickness . . . which may ... be injurious to the public health . . . and shall make regulations for the public health and safety relative thereto .... Whoever violates any such regulation shall forfeit not more than one hundred dollars” (emphasis supplied).
Section 143, as amended by St. 1956, c. 275, § 1, reads: “No trade or employment which may result in a nuisance or be harmful to the inhabitants . . . dangerous to the public health, or may be attended by noisome and injurious odors shall be established in a city or town except in such a location as may be assigned by the board of health . . . after a public hearing . . . and such board of health may prohibit the exercise thereof within the limits of the city or town or in places not so assigned, in any event. . . .” (emphasis supplied).
Section 146 reads: “Orders of prohibition issued under section one hundred and forty-three shall be served . . . upon the occupant or person having charge of the premises where such trade or employment is exercised, and the board shall take all necessary measures to prevent such exercise. Whoever refuses or neglects for twenty-four hours ... to obey . . . shall forfeit not . . . more than five hundred dollars.”
Section 147, as amended by St. 1948, c. 480, § 2, reads: “Whoever is aggrieved by an order made under section one hundred and forty-three . . . may, within three days after service of the order upon him, give written notice of appeal to the board . . . and file a petition for a jury in the superior court . . . and . . . may have a trial in the same manner as other civil cases are tried by jury. . . .”
The provisions of § 31 have been called “superfluous.” See Rep. Atty. Gen. (Jan. 1923), Pub. Doc. 12, 1922, p. xxxi, which recommended elimination of the additional power granted by the section. See also Rep. Atty. Gen. (Jan. 1924), Pub. Doc. 12, 1923, p. 17, which states that “G. L. c. Ill, §§ 31, 122, and 127, all empower local boards of health to make reasonable health regulations.” By St. 1924, c. 180, § 31 was amended to remove any requirement that regulations adopted under § 31 be approved by the Attorney General, as recommended in Ins 1923 report.
Section 187 provides that the “supreme judicial or superior court, upon the application of the board of health of a town, may enforce the orders of said board relative to public health. . . .” In
Waltham
v.
Mignosa,
No serious problem arises with respect to the second regulation here discussed (see footnote 1, supra) which merely incorporates by reference § 31A. It can be sustained on this ground as to its requirement of a permit and under § 3 IB so far as it (in provisions not quoted or here relevant) lays down reasonable rules governing transportation pursuant to permit.
The State administrative procedure act, see G. L. c. 30A, §§ 10, 11, is not applicable to this local board.
