292 Mass. 319 | Mass. | 1935
This is an action of tort described in two counts. At the close of all the evidence the defendant moved that a verdict be directed for the defendant on each count of the declaration and upon all the evidence. This motion was allowed.
The evidence disclosed that the defendant, a municipal corporation, on September 15, 1922, by its commissioners “duly authorized by a vote of said [defendant] Town passed on the 17th day of May A. D. 1897,” conveyed to the plain-, tiff half of lot 530 in the plan of the Eastlawn Cemetery, subject to certain conditions and limitations which are here immaterial. On May 26, 1931, the, plaintiff was lawfully at her cemetery lot, above described, and while there was
It appeared in evidence that the Eastlawn Cemetery was a public cemetery owned by the town and was managed and controlled by cemetery commissioners, or a cemetery committee, who are elected public officers; that this cemetery was used for the burial of the dead and for no other purpose; and that the public officers chosen as cemetery committee selected the sexton for such cemetery.
G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 114, § 10, provides that “Each town shall provide one or more suitable places for the interment of persons dying within its limits.” It is not contended that the defendant town had not accepted the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 114, §§ 22-26, or corresponding provisions in earlier laws, when the deed was delivered and when the accident to the plaintiff occurred, nor that the sexton, Cornellier, was not an employee of the cemetery commissioners. The plaintiff contends that the exception to the general rule, stated in Bolster v. Lawrence, 225 Mass. 387, at page 390, governs the class of action to which the instant action is referable. That exception reads: “On the other hand a municipality is answerable for the acts of its servants or agents in the conduct of functions voluntarily undertaken for its own profit and commercial in
Exceptions overruled.