220 Mass. 319 | Mass. | 1915
The St. of 1880, c. 107, as amended by St. of 1881, c. 22, St. 1909, c. 308, St. 1911, c. 134, St. 1913, c. 168, created the respondent corporation for the purpose of receiving and holding moneys and real and personal estate not exceeding in the aggregate $400,000 for the benefit of the members of the fire department of the city of Boston, and members of the Boston protective department or their families requiring assistance, or for the benefit of any persons or the families of any persons who have been such members and who require assistance. While conceding that the petitioners are employed in the “branch of the department .known as the fire alarm operating branch,” the respondent contends they are not within the purview of the statute, and has refused them recognition as members with the right to participate in its benefits.
To determine the question, it is necessary to ascertain how the fire department is organized, its powers administered, and its duties performed. The report of the auditor with the agreed statement of facts are to be treated as all the evidence the parties cared to introduce. It is largely upon the auditor’s findings that the scope of the original statute, with the amendatory acts, must be construed, under the familiar rule that a fair consideration of. the surrounding conditions may indicate clearly that a literal interpretation is not to control, if thereby the scope and purpose of the statute is defeated. The designation in St. of 1880, c. 107, § 4, of the property held by the respondent as the “Boston Firemen’s Relief Fund,” is not conclusive, but is to be read with the other provisions. The spirit of the law, not the letter, gives it life.
The fire alarm department was a separate department until the passage of the ordinance to establish a consolidated fire department, which provided for a board of three commissioners, a fire engineer, a superintendent of fire alarms, assistant engineers, enginemen, telegraph operators and other members whose maxi-’
But further recapitulation is unnecessary. It is manifest that the fire department of the city as to all its members is under the control of one responsible head or board. It was intended to be and is a single department made up of officers and employees whose services even if diversified are for the sole purpose of safeguarding property within the municipality from loss or damage by fire, and the rules and regulations for the maintenance of discipline, with the penalties for their violation, and the method of enforcement, are made applicable to every member without any distinction as to the particular service he performs. The ordinary daily work of the petitioners may not expose them to the hazards encountered by members who attend fires as the “fire fighting force,” but none the less their services are shown to be equally indispensable. The statute as previously said must be read in connection with the subject of legislation, and when so read “members of the Boston fire department” as used in the act are not to be restricted to those who combat the flames, or endeavor by protective measures to preserve property, but include the petitioners without whose aid fires could not be effectually controlled and extinguished in the mode provided by a carefully coordinated system.
So ordered.