83 A. 128 | N.H. | 1912
The plaintiff cannot recover of the town for the care furnished by his wife to the patient, because she was not employed by the health officer in charge of the case and the board of health has not decided that any part of this expense should be "deemed a legitimate expenditure for the protection of the public health." Laws 1899, c. 100, ss. 1, 2; Pettengill v. Amherst,
When the officer destroyed the infected bedding he was not acting as the agent of the town, but as a public officer under legislative authority, for the benefit and protection of the public. He was as much a public officer as highway surveyors, police officers, and firemen (Brown v. Vinalhaven,
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *384