The plaintiff town of Nantucket filed a complaint on June 23, 1978, to obtain declaratory and injunc-tive relief pursuant to G. L. c. 231 A, § 1, and G. L. c. 185, § 1 (k). The defendant, Walter Beinecke, Jr., moved to dismiss the complaint under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (6),
The complaint alleges the following facts. On March 27, 1964, the town treasurer assigned tax title to a certain parcel of land consisting of 47.54 acres to one John J. Gardner, II, for $15.38. On May 8, 1967, one Roy E. Sanguinetti contracted to convey title to the defendant. Gardner conveyed title to Sanguinetti as trustee of Windswept Realty Trust on May 10, 1967, for less than $100. On May 31, 1967, San-guinetti conveyed title to the defendant for a total consideration of $16,500. During these transactions, Gardner was a tax assessor for the town, and Sanguinetti was town counsel and town moderator. The defendant had actual knowledge of the town offices held by Gardner and Sanguinetti. The complaint alleges an actual controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant over the rights of the town against the defendant under the Conflict of Interest Law, G. L. c. 268A, §§ 19, 20 (a), 21 (a). The complaint prays (a) for a declaration that the deed to the defendant is voidable, (b) for a declaration of the terms under which the defendant should reconvey the land to the plaintiff, (c) for an order re *347 quiring the defendant to reconvey the land on such terms, and (d) for any other further relief deemed proper by the court. 1
The defendant’s motion to dismiss raised three basic defenses in seven separate paragraphs: (1) the action is barred by the statute of limitations; (2) the action is barred by loches; and (3) the complaint fails to show that any conflict of interest “substantially influenced” the transfer of tax title in 1964.
The Land Court judge filed an opinion ruling that the plaintiff’s claim was time-barred, 2 and entered judgment on January 24, 1979, dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice.
We consider first the question of which, if any, statute of limitations governs actions brought under the Conflict of Interest Law, G. L. c. 268A, § 21. The plaintiff contends that actions brought under G. L. c. 268A, § 21, are not governed by any statute of limitations. We disagree. On other occasions, when faced with similar claims relating to a new right created by a statute which, as here, contained no limitation provision within itself, this court has looked to the essential nature of the right to determine which statute of limitations should be applied. See
Baldassari
v.
Public Fin. Trust,
We find nothing in the legislative history of G. L. c. 268A, § 21, which would suggest that the Legislature, by not specifically prescribing a period of time within which an action under § 21 must be brought, intended that actions not be time-limited. If such a result had been intended, it would have been natural for the Legislature to express such an intention. Cf.
Boston
v.
Gordon,
We now turn to the question of which statute of limitations should govern such actions. Looking to the “ ‘gist of the action’ or the essential nature of the plaintiff’s claim”
(Hendrickson
v.
Sears,
The plaintiff contends that the trial judge erred in applying the two-year tort statute of limitations contained in G. L. c. 260, § 2A, as opposed to the three-year period contained in St. 1973, c. 777, §§1,4, applicable to the causes of action “arising on and after” January 1, 1974. The judge applied the two-year statute of limitations implicitly finding that that cause of action arose prior to 1974. We agree with this aspect of the judge’s decision, it being clear that the cause of action arose prior to 1974. Gardner received tax title to the locus in 1964, and Sanguinetti purchased and *350 sold the same to the defendant in 1967. These activities, both occurring prior to the effective date of the three-year statute, gave rise to the plaintiff’s cause of action. The judge properly applied the two-year tort statute of limitations contained in G. L. c. 260, § 2A.
We now turn to the judge’s determination that the town was on notice by 1975. The judge correctly stated that “ [rjecent Massachusetts decisions make it clear that the statute commences to run when the plaintiff knew or should have known of the wrong.”
Friedman
v.
Jablonski,
To apply this principle properly in a proceeding brought by a town under G. L. c. 268A, § 21, it is necessary to decide what person or persons in the town need know of the wrong in order to put the town on notice. Certainly each and every citizen in the town need not know, and likewise knowledge by a few unofficial persons is clearly insufficient. Even knowledge by certain town officials may be insufficient to charge the town with knowledge. For example, the town treasurer who assigned tax title to Gardner in 1964 clearly knew of the wrong complained of here, yet her involvement in the allegedly illegal transaction (even if such involvement was not culpable under the statute) precludes her knowledge from being charged to the town.
We feel that a realistic notice concept is appropriate under the Conflict of Interest Law, G. L. c. 268A, § 21, in order to further the purposes of the legislation. The statute is aimed at restraining municipal employees from maintaining a financial interest in contracts made by a municipal agency. The purpose of the Conflict of Interest Law, at least in part, is to protect municipalities from overreaching by their employees. It would be anomalous to ignore this protective policy by charging the knowledge of the culprits as notice to the municipality being wronged by their acts, as the defendant suggests.
*351
While we express no opinion as to when a town will be charged with knowledge in each and every case, we suggest, as a general proposition, that only when those disinterested persons who are capable of acting on behalf of the town knew or should have known of the wrong, should the town be charged with such knowledge.
7
While it might be claimed, in another case, that knowledge of town counsel is sufficient to charge the town with notice, that certainly cannot be said in this case due to his active involvement in violating the statute. Obviously, in a town where the board of selectmen have been appointed as agents to bring suits on behalf of the town, their knowledge would be sufficient to charge the town. See G. L. c. 40, § 2;
Great Barrington
v.
Gibbons,
The trial judge, in deciding that the town was on notice by 1975, made reference to certain dicta in a Nantucket Probate Court decision which came to the attention of the board of selectmen of Nantucket on September 16, 1975. While the judge’s focus on knowledge by the board of selectmen was entirely appropriate, the use of judicial notice with respect to the manner in which the board necessarily acquired such knowledge was erroneous. The judge stated: “By decision dated September 16, 1975 and filed on the following September 19, 1975, the Nantucket Probate Court dealt harshly with the conduct of which the Town now complains. . . . 8 *352 While this was dicta in the case, it cannot have failed to have been brought to the attention of the Board of Selectmen of Nantucket. This Court takes judicial notice of the geographical size of the town, its sparse population, particularly in September, the presence of a weekly newspaper which as a usual practice fully covers pending litigation and the controversies which have engaged its residents for the past several years. On September 19, 1975 the Town cumulatively had knowledge of sufficient facts to be put on notice that its employees may have violated chapter 268A and at this time the running of the statute of limitations began.”
Judicial notice was properly taken with respect to the geographical size of the town, its sparse population in September, and the existence of a weekly newspaper. See
Clohecy
v.
Haverhill,
*353
In the case at bar, as in
Duarte, petitioner, supra,
the judge drew the line in the wrong place. See also
Ferriter
v.
Borthwick,
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 268A, § 21 (a), as appearing in St. 1962, c. 779, § 1, provides: “In addition to any other remedies provided by law, any violation of sections two, three, eight, or sections fifteen to twenty, inclusive, which has substantially influenced the action taken by any municipal agency in any particular matter shall be grounds for avoiding, rescinding or cancelling the action on such terms as the interest of the municipality and innocent third persons require.”
The judge also concluded that the complaint was faulty in that it failed to allege “conduct substantially influencing the assignment.” See
Charbonnier
v.
Amico,
In
Lynch
v.
Signal Fin. Co.,
We note, also, that Sanguinetti’s acts while he was town counsel constituted a breach of his fiduciary duty to his client, the town. See
Hendrickson
v.
Sears,
Compare this situation to a suit to set aside a conveyance of land for fraud. The problem of whether to apply the statute of limitations for fraud or the statute of limitations for recovery of land in such a situation is analyzed in Annot.,
The complaint contains no allegation of fraudulent concealment. Cf. G. L. c. 260, § 12.
As to defendant’s contention that the plaintiff’s complaint is defective in failing to allege facts which, if proved, would demonstrate that the complaint is not barred by the statute of limitations, we note that it need not necessarily appear on the face of the complaint that those persons who are authorized to bring suit on behalf of the town were without knowledge during the period of the statute of limitations. Compare this action brought pursuant to G. L. c. 268A, § 21, to
Friedman
v.
Jablonski,
The Probate Court judge stated: “During that period of time when he was town counsel for Nantucket, Roy E. Sanguinetti, Trustee of Windswept Realty Trust, purchased a parcel of tax title vacant land from said Town, through a ‘straw,’ one of the assessors for the Town of Nantucket, for less than $100.00 on May 10, 1967. Three weeks later, on May 31, *352 1967, he sold it, as said Trustee, to Walter J. Beinecke, Jr. for $16,500.00, a violation of his trust as a public official and as an attorney at law. He failed to report this short term capital gain on his 1967 Fiduciary Tax Return or any other tax return, ... a criminal offense under the laws of the United States and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.”
