By this petition for a writ of mandamus the petitioner seeks to compel the respondent district attorney (hereinafter called the respondent) to reinstate him to his position as special messenger, to assign him duties consistent with his position, and to sign papers necessary to authorize the county treasurer to pay him compensation.
The case was submitted to the trial judge on a statement of agreed facts. The judge ordered the writ to issue. From a final judgment entered in accordance with this order the respondent appealed. G-. L. c. 213, § ID, as amended by St. 1957, c. 155.
*213 On December 30, 1932, the petitioner with the approval of the county commissioners commenced work for the county of Middlesex as a junior messenger under the supervision of the superintendent of buildings. On June 11, 1937, pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 35, §§ 48-55, the county commissioners appointed the petitioner to be senior messenger and janitor, under the supervision of the superintendent of buildings. This appointment, subject to review by the county personnel board, became final. On July 30, 1946, at the request of the then district attorney George E. Thompson, Esquire, and with the approval of the county commissioners, the petitioner was transferred to the district attorney’s office to serve as special messenger under the district attorney’s supervision. This appointment, also subject to review by the county personnel board, became final. The petitioner was not appointed to any office by the district attorney. General Laws c. 12, § 22, as amended through St. 1948, c. 423, § 6, is not applicable. He. was, in effect, placed at the disposal of the district attorney by the county commissioners as a county employee classified under the county classification plan as a special messenger. He continued in this position until December 31,1958. The successor district attorney James L. O’Dea, Junior, Esquire, had on December 2,1958, notified the petitioner that his position would be “abolished” effective December 31, 1958, and that the county commissioners and county personnel board had been so informed. Thereafter the petitioner appealed to the county commissioners pursuant to G. L. e. 35, § 52, and requested a hearing on the action of the district attorney. He also appealed to the county personnel board and requested a hearing.
The county commissioners on January 20, 1959, after hearing notified the county personnel board that the petitioner’s position was in the classified personnel service, that the position was not abolished by the district attorney’s action, and that the petitioner was entitled to his salary and other benefits pertaining to his position. On July 22, 1959, following a full hearing, at which all inter *214 ested parties appeared, the personnel board upheld the decision of the county commissioners, reversed the action of the district attorney, and directed him “to take such action as may be necessary in conformity with this decision.”
The district attorney refused to comply with the board’s order. The respondent John J. Droney, Esquire, thereafter succeeded Mr. O’Dea as district attorney and has not reinstated the petitioner.
The judgment entered in the Superior Court was right. The county commissioners and the county personnel board had jurisdiction to hear the petitioner’s appeal under Gr. L. c. 35, § 52. The pertinent part of that statute is as follows: “Any person aggrieved by the allocation or classification of his office or position
or by any other action
or by any failure to act, under any provision of sections forty-eight to fifty-five, inclusive, may appeal in writing to the board. Such appeal shall be filed with the county commissioners . . . who shall forward the appeal to the board, accompanied by a report and their recommendations thereon. . . . The board, after giving all parties interested an opportunity to be heard, shall pass upon the appeal and its decision shall be final and
binding upon all such parties,
including the county commissioners and the person appealing” (emphasis added). The board’s authority to entertain appeals is not limited to situations where an employee has been aggrieved by allocation, classification, or failure to act under any of the provisions of §§ 48 through 55 of the statute. An employee aggrieved “by any other action” may appeal to the board. This broad clause certainly includes such action as an attempt by an immediate superior, acting administratively and alone, to abolish a position which had been established, classified and allocated according to laws and rules pertaining to county personnel. G. L. c. 35, § 51. Cf.
Dolan
v.
County of Suffolk,
The respondent contends that mandamus does not lie be
*215
cause it has not been shown as required (1) that he has a clear duty defined by law to reinstate the petitioner (see
Knights
v.
Treasurer & Receiver Gen.
The statute imposes a clear duty upon the respondent to comply with the board’s decision. The words of a statute are to be construed according to their natural import and approved usage.
Commonwealth
v.
Welosky,
Judgment affirmed.
