The petitioner sought to procure the discharge of funds from an attachment by trustee process. She appeals from an order of the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston dismissing a report by a judge of that court who dismissed the petition. The sole issue, one of first impression, is whether G. L. c. 118, § 10, bars trustee process against funds which are paid to a recipient under Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), G. L. c. 118, and which are deposited by the recipient in a bank account. 1
*152 We state the pertinent facts. In an earlier action for property damage the respondent obtained a judgment against the petitioner, a recipient of aid under AFDC. The respondent then commenced an action on the judgment by trustee process and named The First National Bank of Boston as trustee. The" bank answered it had funds in the name of the petitioner in the amount of $44.93. A finding was made that “[t]he [bank] credit at the time of attachment was monies remaining to the plaintiff in cashing her aid check and paying sundry bills for necessaries.”
“Statute 1967, c. 658, transferred the administration of all parts of the welfare program except aid to veterans under c. 115 to the Commonwealth; and it relieved municipalities from financial responsibility for the functions thus transferred.”
Cambridge
v.
Commissioner of Pub. Welfare,
“An intent to pass an ineffective statute is not to be imputed to the Legislature.”
Repucci
v.
Exchange Realty Co.
The decision reached here is in accord with the results reached by other courts in construing similar statutes. See
Lawrence
v.
Shaw,
The order of the Appellate Division dismissing the report is reversed. Judgment allowing the petition is to be entered.
So ordered.
Notes
The pertinent part of G. L. c. 118, § 10, as appearing in St. 1936, c. 413, § 1, states that: “Aid hereunder [AFDC] shall not be subject to trustee process and no assignment thereof shall be valid.”
