The plaintiff town seeks to recover from the defendants its cost of fighting a fire on land of the defendant corporation. It claims damages on the basis of common law tort liability for negligence or misrepresentation and on the basis of G. L. c. 266, § 8, and G. L. c. Ill, § 145. The complaint was dismissed in the Superior Court under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (6),
*61 The complaint contained two counts. In the first the town alleged that the defendants had negligently dumped some 750,000 used tires on land in the town, violating G. L. c. Ill, §§ 143 & 150A, and creating a nuisance and a fire hazard, and that as a result the town fire department was unable to inspect the premises properly and unable to extinguish promptly a fire that occurred on the premises. As a result the town “incurred greater expense than usual and necessary” in extinguishing and controlling the fire. The second count added an allegation that the defendants “falsely and maliciously with intent to defraud, mis-stated to the Board of Health . . . and the Board of Selectmen the proposed use and scope of operations at the site,” and that as a result the town boards could not take proper precautions.
There seems to be no authority for common law recovery by a town of its expenses in fighting a fire. See
People
v.
Wilson,
*62
Under these authorities the right of the town to recover firefighting expenses depends on statute. See, e.g., G. L. c. 48, § 59A, providing for a written agreement for reimbursement in case of aid to another municipality; G. L. c. 148, § 5, abatement of fire hazard at owner’s expense on twenty-four hour notice. Such statutes have generally been strictly construed. See
United States
v.
Burlington N.,
Inc.,
Judgment affirmed.
