316 Mass. 410 | Mass. | 1944
This action of contract under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 122, § 10, as amended, for the care and support of one Horrigan at the State Infirmary at Tewksbury from March 16, 1939, to January 27, 1943, raises the sole question whether previously he had acquired a settlement in the defendant city. The case was tried on a statement of agreed facts, from which the following appears: Horrigan was born in Watertown in 1881, came to Boston “in 1929,” and resided there until his admission on March 16, 1939, to the State Infirmary at Tewksbury, where he was still a patient at the time of the trial. He served five days in jail beginning April 6, 1931, and ten days in jail beginning June 22, 1931. “He had no opportunity to acquire [a settlement] after 1935.” The defendant submitted two requests for rulings, one to the effect that the time spent in jail prevented the acquisition of a legal settlement in Boston, and the other that on all the evidence the plaintiff was not en
The plaintiff contends that Horrigan acquired a settlement “by five continuous years residence in Boston from 1929 to 1935” exclusive of the time spent in jail. The defendant contends that “the five years to acquire a settlement must be five full uninterrupted calendar years,” which cannot be found because of interruptions by time spent in jail.
In order to “acquire a settlement” Horrigan must have resided in Boston “for five consecutive years.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 116, § 1, First. General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 116, § 5, provides: “The time during which a person shall be an inmate of any infirmary, jail, prison, or other public or state institution, within the commonwealth or in any manner under its care and direction . . . shall not be counted in computing the time either for acquiring or defeating a settlement.”
We are of opinion that the judge was right in finding, as he must have found to find for the plaintiff, that Horrigan acquired a settlement in Boston. While it is true that “consecutive” ordinarily conveys the thought of unbroken sequence or uninterrupted succession, the word must be construed in connection with the other provision that the time during which a person is an inmate of a jail “shall not be counted in computing the time either for acquiring or defeating a settlement.” See Walsworth v. Casassa, 219 Mass. 200, 204. There would be no apparent occasion for the application of all the words in § 5 were “consecutive” to be given the meaning for which the defendant contends. If one day in jail stopped the running of the five years, legislative prohibition against counting time so spent would have been unnecessary. Whately v. Hatfield, 196 Mass. 393, was a case arising under Pub. Sts. c. 83, § 1, Fifth, in which one of the requirements for acquiring a settlement was residence “for five years together.” Although there was no statutory provision analogous to § 5, and a total of five years could be reached only by combining time spent in a town both before and after a jail term, this court held that
Exceptions overruled.