It seems quite clear, that under the provisions of the statute in force before the enactment of the revised stat utes, this action could not have been supported; the right t( institute an action for supplies furnished to poor persons in need of relief, and where the overseers of the town refused or neglected to furnish the same, being restricted to persons who were inhabitants of the town against which the suit was brought. Mitchell v. Cornville, 12 Mass. 333. Miller v. Somerset, and Kittredge v. Newbury, 14 Mass. 396, 448. Watson v. Cambridge, 15 Mass. 286. Have the Rev. Sts. c. 46, § 18, changed the law on this subject ? They have in terms. The former statute (St. 1793, c. 59, § 13,) restricted the right to recover for supplies thus furnished, to “ an inhabitant ” of the town within which such supplies were furnished. The revised statutes have substituted the words “ any person,” for the word “ in" habitant ” used in the former.
When we consider that the adjudications in the earlier cases were particularly placed upon the restriction or limitation of the persons entitled to this action, arising from the use of the term ,£ inhabitant ” in the statute ; and when we perceive, in one of
This fact doubtless furnishes some reason to suppose that no substantial alteration was intended, but is not sufficient to overbalance the evidence of such purpose, manifested in the change of language in the section itself; a change which must have been obvious to the minds of the commissioners, conversant as they were with the judicial decisions which had been made on the proper construction of St. 1793, c. 59, § 13, on this subject. We come therefore to the result, that a more enlarged provision, in cases of this kind, has been provided in the revised statutes.
The further inquiry is, whether, in the present case, the sup plies were furnished for the relief of a pauper, and after due notice to the overseers of the poor of Scituate. That Freeman House, jr. was a person in need of relief, and a proper subject to receive aid from the overseers of the poor, is not denied by the defendants. But it was suggested, that the notice was not sufficiently explicit that the application for aid for House was to furnish the same to him as a pauper. It is true that the notice stated that House himself did not wish to be considered a?
Judgment for the plaintiff
