131 Mass. 18 | Mass. | 1881
This action is brought to recover expenses for the support of Alice V. Phelan. She is the daughter of James Phelan. It is contended that the pauper’s settlement is in Boston by derivation from her father, James Phelan, who died November 22, 1869. At the time of the death of James Phelan, he had no settlement within this Commonwealth. He was an alien born, and was never naturalized. He removed from Dorchester to Taunton in 1865, and resided in Taunton until his death. He had resided in the town of Dorchester from 1851 to 1865, and paid a poll tax every year. These facts would have given him a settlement in Dorchester under the St. of 1868, c. 328, if they had occurred subsequently to the passage of that act. It is not contended by the plaintiff that he had acquired a settlement under that act, except by force of the amendment to it by the St. of 1871, c. 379, § 1.
The defendant concedes that, if the statute had fixed the settlement in that part of Boston which was formerly Dorchester, the defendant city would be liable. No question is therefore made upon that part of the ease. The view which
By the Gen. Sts. c. 69, § 1, cl. 12, a citizen of this or any other of the United States, of the age of twenty-one years, gained a settlement in any place in this Commonwealth by residing there for ten years together, and paying all taxes assessed on his poll or estate for any five years of the ten. The St. of 1868, c. 328, § 1, provided that “Hereafter, any person of the age of twenty-one years having the other qualifications mentioned in ” the Gen. Sts. c. 69, cl. 12, and certain other clauses, “ shall be deemed to have thereby gained a settlement as therein provided, although not a citizen of this or any other of the United States.” In Commonwealth v. Sudbury, 106 Mass. 268, the court held that this statute operated only prospectively. The St. of 1871, c. 379, § 1, amended the St. of 1868, c. 328, § 1, “ by adding thereto the words, ‘whether such other qualifications shall have been acquired before or after the enactment hereof.”’