276 Mass. 100 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant a sum of money for poor relief furnished to one Lillian G. Ainslie from March 23, 1928, to the date of the plaintiff’s writ, July 18, 1929. The action was heard by a judge of the Superior Court, without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts which contains “all the evidence and all the material facts in the case”; and it comes before this court on the defendant’s appeal from an order, for judgment for the plaintiff entered in the Superior Court.
The agreed facts pertinent to the issue presented are as follows: On March 15, 1923, Harry A. Ainslie had a settlement in the town of Norwell. At that time his wife, Lillian G. Ainslie, had a settlement in said town derived from him by marriage. On that date they moved to the town of Cohasset with their family and continued to reside there up to and including November 16, 1927, when the husband was killed in an automobile accident. The widow did not remarry and continued to reside with her children in the town of Cohasset, where, on January 1, 1928, she became in need of relief, aid and support which were given her by the “Overseers of the Poor and/or Board of Public Welfare” of the town of Cohasset.. On January 5, 1928, the said overseers and/or board notified the overseers of the poor or board of public welfare of the town of Norwell that
The issue presented is whether a married woman who, with her husband, has been absent from the place of his settlement in this Commonwealth less than five consecutive years, after becoming a widow loses her settlement derived from him at the expiration of the remainder of the five years if she is still absent from the place of his settlement and of her derivative settlement.
G. L. c. 116, § 1, provides in part: “Legal settlements may be acquired in any town in the following manner and' not otherwise: First, Except as provided in the following clause, each person who after reaching the age of twenty-one has resided in any town within the commonwealth for five consecutive years shall thereby acquire a settlement in such town. Second, A married woman shall follow and have the settlement of her husband; but if he has no settlement within the commonwealth, she shall retain the settlement, if any, which she had at the time of her marriage and may acquire a settlement under the preceding clause. Third, Legitimate children shall follow and have the settlement of their father if he has one within the commonwealth, otherwise they shall follow and have the settlement of their mother if she has one; if the father dies during the minority of his children they shall thereafter follow and have the settlement of the mother. Upon the divorce of the parents the minor children shall follow and have the settlement of the parent to whom the court awards their custody.” G. L. c. 116, § 5, provided: “Each settlement existing on August twelfth, nineteen hundred and eleven, shall continue in force until changed or defeated under this chapter, but from and after said date absence for five consecutive years by a person from a town where he had a settlement shall defeat such settlement.” Under this provision it was decided by this court that a married woman who, with her husband, had been absent from the
The defendant concedes upon the facts stated that prior to St. 1926, c. 292, above quoted, Lillian G. Ainslie would not have lost her derivative settlement by absence for any length of time although her husband’s settlement might be defeated, and, similarly, the minor children would not have lost their settlements by absence for any length of time although the settlement of the parents might be defeated, but makes the contention that the words “provided the settlement of her husband is defeated” in St. 1926, c. 292, show that the Legislature intended to change the law in respect to the derivative settlements of married women as it lawfully might do, Bradford v. Worcester, 184 Mass. 557, and further contends that the word “defeated” as used in St. 1926, c. 292, is meant to mean loss of settlement by the termination thereof by residence elsewhere, by death, or from any other cause; and as respects a married woman that her derivative settlement at the expiration of five consecutive years’ absence from the place of her husband’s settlement would not defeat her derivative settlement if the husband had preserved his settlement and it was not defeated at the time the five consecutive years had run against the wife. It contends that the statute operated against the widow if at the time the five consecutive years of nonresidence had run she then had no derivative settlement from her husband by reason of his death or from some other cause.
We think the Legislature by St. 1926, c. 292, did not intend to give the death of the husband an effect it did not have before the passage of this statute or, more particularly, to take away the necessity of the voluntary character of the act of the wife unless her husband’s settlement had been defeated before his death. Brookfield v. Holden, 247 Mass. 577. Treasurer & Receiver General v. Boston, 255 Mass. 499. Upon the facts here stated the settlement of the husband, within the meaning of the statute, was not defeated before his death; Upon his death his widow ceased to be a married woman and could commence to
The entry must be judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,379.12.
So ordered.