This is a bill in equity brought by twelve taxpayers of the city of Boston under G. L. c. 214, § 3 (11), against the city’s parks and recreation commission (hereinafter parks department) and, by amendment, the city, in order (quoting the words of the statute) “to enforce the purpose . . . of . . . [the] gift or conveyance” to the city of land in its Brighton district included within the Chestnut Hill Reservoir grounds, for the “specific purpose . . . in trust or otherwise” of a park. The Attorney General intervened as a party plaintiff under the express authorization of § 3 (11) which provides that, the proceeding having been begun by taxpayers with leave of court, “the attorney general . . . may intervene as a party at any stage of the proceedings.” Although entitled “Petition to Intervene” the document filed recites that the Attorney General “intervenes as a party petitioner”; the filing of the document made the Attorney General a party.
The bill of complaint alleged that the city through the parks department with the approval of the mayor and the written authorization of the city council had agreed, illegally, to sell for an apartment building site a parcel of park land at Chestnut Hill Avenue and Commonwealth Avenue of an area of about 64,000 square feet.
The case was heard on a statement of agreed facts and, after findings, rulings and order for a decree, a final decree was entered, from which the defendants have appealed, en *643 joining the defendants from selling the land ‘ ‘ except as part of a plan to adjust the park area of which it is a part, and without first arranging for the acquisition by the City of Boston, by virtue of . . . [St. 1899, c. 274], of other land to be added to the said park area and to be purchased with the proceeds of such sale.”
1. The bill may not be maintained under G-. L. c. 214, § 3 (11). The land was purchased by the city in 1865 for a substantial consideration for no specific purpose recited in the deeds, “to have and to hold . . . in fee simple forever.” Statute 1865, c. 131, had authorized the city to build an additional reservoir and this suggests the occasion for the purchase of the land. Statute 1875, c. 185, established a board of park commissioners (now succeeded by the parks department). Statute 1899, c. 274, § 1, gave to that board “the custody, care and control of all lands owned by the city” in a territory so defined as to include the Chestnut Hill Reservoir lands and authorized the board to “take by purchase or otherwise such other lands within said boundary not owned by the Commonwealth, as said board with the approval of the mayor may deem desirable for park purposes .... [The board] shall have the same powers over any lands placed or taken under the custody, care and control of said board by authority of this act, as if said lands had been taken by said board by the exercise of the right of eminent domain, given by . . . [St. 1875, c. 185, as amended or added to].” Section 3 provides that the board “when authorized by the city council may sell any lands owned by the city, within the boundaries aforesaid, on such terms as . . . [the] board with the approval of the mayor may deem proper, and shall use the proceeds thereof in payment for any lands taken for park purposes under this act. ’ ’
The plaintiffs contend that St. 1899, c. 274, “included a conveyance of the land” sufficient to satisfy the requirement of G. L. c. 214, § 3 (11). We disagree. Statute 1899, c. 274, made the land park land and placed it in the custody, care and control of the park commissioners. This exercise of the undoubted power of the General Court over a munici
*644
polity and its property cannot be tortured into a “gift or conveyance” and it is inconsequential whether the purpose was “a specific purpose ... in trust or otherwise.” See
Loomis
v.
Boston,
2. This park land may be disposed of only on specific legislative authorization.
Lowell
v.
Boston,
The Attorney General is the proper public officer to protect the general public interest in this land. G. L. c. 12, § 3. It is an interest similar to that which he is expressly authorized to protect by G. L. c. 214, § 3 (11). It has been “generally held . . . that, in the absence of a statute, his authority ... [to protect the public interest] is restricted to the abatement of public nuisances . . . and to the protection of the public interest under charitable trusts. ’ ’
Attorney Gen.
v.
Trustees of Boston Elev. Ry.
This is an appropriate case for a declaratory decree under Gr. L. c. 231A. By § 9 the purpose of that statute “is to remove, and to afford relief from, uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, duties, status and other legal relations, ’ ’ and the statute is to be “ liberally construed and administered.”
City Manager of Medford
v.
Civil Serv. Commn.
There is an actual controversy (Gr. L. c. 231 A, § 1) between the city and its parks department on the one hand and the Attorney General representing all the public. All persons “who have or claim any interest which would be affected” (§8) are parties.
A possible purchaser of the land has no right to be heard oh this issue of statutory construction. Compare
Harvey Payne, Inc.
v.
Slate Co.
*646 The bill of complaint, having in effect been adopted by the Attorney General, may be maintained as a bill brought by him under G. L. c. 231A, and for injunctive relief.
3. The construction, in the final decree, of St. 1899, c. 274, § 3, is correct except that, by virtue of the express limitation of § 1, the “other land to be added to the said park area” must be some other land “within said boundary not owned by the Commonwealth.” The statute, in § 3, provides that the proceeds of the sale are to be used as “payment for any lands taken for park purposes under this act.”
The act is to be construed in the light of its dominant purpose. We reject the suggestion that the limitation is only on the use of the proceeds. The city may not sell the land now and hold the proceeds indefinitely pending the opportunity, which may never come, to replace the land within the stated boundaries.
We reserve such questions as whether the purchase at a lesser sum of land which may reasonably be deemed adequate to replace that sold would comply with the statute, or how to dispose of any balance of the sale price after such purchase.
We think the statute did not limit the city to making only initial adjustments in the park area.
4. The final decree is to be modified to declare the construction of St. 1899, c. 274, in accordance herewith and to give conforming injunctive relief.
So ordered.
Notes
This provides for the sale of the land to The Turner Associates Trust for $175,000 and that the seller obtain the written approval of the mayor and the written authorization of the city council, the elimination of height restrictions and delivery of a deed within ninety days after the approval of final plans by an. appropriate municipal agency or agencies unless the buyer should request an earlier date.
