This case is before us on appeals from decrees sustaining a demurrer and dismissing a bill in equity to restrain the exercise of an offensive trade in violation of an order of the board of health of the city of Revere.
The bill alleged that on September 17, 1942, and prior thereto, the defendant was conducting the business of painting automobile truck bodies on certain premises in Revere; that on this day the board of health, after due inspection of the defendant’s premises, passed a vote prohibiting the exercise of such a trade on said premises as the board of health was of the opinion that the exercise of said trade “is hurtful to the inhabitants and injurious to their estates and dangerous to public health and is noisome and attended by injurious odors”; that the defendant, after being served with a copy of said order, filed a petition in the Superior Court for a trial by jury of an appeal from said order; that this petition was dismissed and that the defendant continues to exercise said trade in violation of the order of the board.
All grounds of the demurrer which challenge the sufficiency of the allegations of the bill are open on this appeal, and we are not confined to the particular grounds upon
We consider all grounds of the demurrer which are properly raised by this form of pleading. The board of health was not required to assign any place in the city for the exercise of a trade similar to that of the defendant, and it could prohibit the carrying on of such a business within the city. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 111, § 143, as amended by St. 1933, c. 269, § 2. Taunton v. Taylor,
There is nothing in the contentions raised by the demurrer that the statutes, in accordance with which the bill shows the board of health acted, are unconstitutional, even if we assume the question is open to one who invoked the aid of these statutes in testing the validity of the order. Nichols v. Commissioner of Public Welfare,
None of the allegations of the bill shows that the action of the board was arbitrary and capricious, as set up in the demurrer. The special ground that the order was unfair, inequitable and unjust.toward the defendant cannot be sustained. If the defendant was the only one affected by the order, that would not render it invalid. Massachusetts General Hospital v. Belmont,
The order of the board, through the inadvertence of a clerk, described the premises as numbered 1495 North Shore Road, Revere, and the vote was corrected so as properly to define the premises occupied by the defendant which were numbered 1459 on this road. The bill alleges that the defendant was not misled by reason of this mistake and waived any objection thereto, and that the record of the vote as corrected duly set forth the vote that was actually passed. The bill shows nothing that renders the vote invalid because of this clerical mistake. The board had the right to correct its records so as to make them comply with the truth. Halleck v. Boylston,
The defendant filed a motion to dismiss the appeal because the original bill to which a demurrer had been sustained was not included in the record of the present appeal. The original bill became of no importance upon the filing by the city of an amended bill in accordance with the allowance of its motion for leave to do so. Cole v. Wells,
It follows that the motion to dismiss the appeal is denied, the interlocutory and final decrees are reversed and an interlocutory decree is to be entered overruling the demurrer.
Ordered accordingly.
