327 Mass. 225 | Mass. | 1951
This is a bill in equity under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231 A, as inserted by St. 1945, c. 582, § 1, by an insurer, seeking a determination of its obligations under a compulsory motor vehicle liability policy issued to Brow, one of the defendants, under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 34A, as amended. The other defendants were made parties because of an accident in which the motor vehicle covered by the policy was involved. The accident happened on B Street, Union Village, a veterans’ housing development, in Brain-tree, on October 18, 1948.
The only issue is whether or not B Street is a way within the meaning of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 1.
We find that Union Village is a veterans’ housing development built on land of Braintree and by the town sometime in July, 1946, by virtue of St. 1946, c. 372, as amended, effective May 23, 1946, parts of which are quoted below.
The main street of this development is Village Avenue, and from it run four streets called A, B, C, and D, all laid out and provided by the town in connection with the development. None of these streets was laid out or ever accepted by the town under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 82. B Street is about one hundred feet long and fifteen feet wide, and two houses have been built on each side of it. Its surface is of a hard tar composition, and sewer, water, and gas pipes
There was no error in the action of the judge.
Under § 34A of c. 90 the motor vehicle liability policy covers the operation of a motor vehicle upon the ways of the Commonwealth. In § 1 of c. 90 a way is defined as any public highway or private way laid out under authority of statute.
This veterans’ housing development was provided by the town by virtue of St. 1946, c. 372, § 4, or § 6. From the record we are unable to determine exactly under which section of the statute this development was built, but we assume in favor of the plaintiff that it was under § 4. By § 4 towns were authorized to provide temporary shelter for veterans by several methods of which the following is here relevant: “(d) By purchasing, leasing or acquiring . . . one or more tracts of land . . . preparing such tracts for occupancy . . . and permitting veterans to occupy such tracts with dwelling units of a temporary nature . . .” (emphasis supplied). Section 6 provides so far as here material that a town may expend money and take such other action as is suitable and necessary for the purpose of providing permanent shelter for veterans by acquiring one or more tracts of land suitable for a housing development, subdividing such tracts into parcels of adequate size for house lots, “laying out and providing or causing to be provided ways, public and private, and other public utilities for the use of the development, to such extent as it deems necessary or advisable” (emphasis supplied).
It is true that § 4 contains no provisions similar to that contained in § 6 expressly authorizing a town to lay out and provide ways public or private in connection with veterans’
From the facts hereinbefore found and recited above we are of opinion that B Street comes within one of these defined categories. See Opinion of the Justices, 313 Mass. 779, 784-785.
We are fortified in this belief by what has been said many times by this court that the purpose or primary object of the compulsory motor vehicle liability insurance statute is not to protect the insured from loss but to compensate persons injured through the operation of motor vehicles. Its real design is to protect the public. Rose v. Franklin Surety Co. 281. Mass. 538, 540. Wheeler v. O’Connell, 297 Mass.
To say that one injured by an automobile on B Street, a way laid out and provided by Braintree in connection with a suitable development for veterans’ housing, could not be given the protection of a compulsory motor vehicle liability policy, would certainly be not to advance but to retard the remedy which the statute was intended to afford. In view of the development of so many housing projects in our Commonwealth, both veterans’ and otherwise, any result contrary to that which we have arrived at would nullify the beneficent objects of c. 90, § 34A. It is to be understood that nothing we have said herein has any application to questions which may arise under the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 82, c. 83, or c. 84, or to the obligations of municipalities under any of these statutes which may involve different principles of law from those in issue here.
Decree affirmed with costs.
“Section 4. During the present emergency a city or town may raise, appropriate and expend money and take such other action as is suitable and necessary for the purpose of providing shelter for veterans who are inhabitants of such city or town by any or all of the following methods: ...(d) By purchasing, leasing or acquiring by gift or by talcing by eminent domain one or more tracts of land which are entirely or almost entirely unoccupied by buildings, preparing such tracts for occupancy as herein provided, and permitting veterans to occupy such tracts with dwelling units of a temporary nature, such as portable or pre-fabricated houses, cabins, huts or trailers; or by itself providing such dwelling units of a temporary nature by causing them to be constructed or by acquiring them through purchase, lease, gift or grant wherever they may be found, causing them to be transported to the tracts so acquired and to be set up and made ready for occupancy. Dwelling units of a temporary nature when provided by a city or town may consist of separate apartments in a building designed to contain two or more dwelling units. Reasonable rates shall be charged for occupancy of land, buildings or other structures under this paragraph, (e) By using any real estate, which it has acquired by foreclosure of tax titles or in any other way and which is not devoted to and required by any other public use, for any of the purposes set forth in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section” (emphasis supplied).
“Section 6. Subject to the provisions of section seven, a city or town may also during the present emergency, raise, appropriate and expend money and take such other action as is suitable and necessary for the purpose of providing shelter for veterans who are inhabitants of such city or town, by purchasing or acquiring by gift or by taking by eminent domain one or more tracts of land of sufficient size for a housing development, or by using any such tract to which it holds title and which is not devoted to and required by any other public use, subdividing such tracts into parcels of adequate size for house lots, laying out and providing or causing to be provided ways, public and private, and other public utilities for the use of the development, to such extent as it deems necessary or advisable . . .” (emphasis supplied).