Marble v. Inhabitants of Clinton

1 Mass. App. Div. 483
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 7, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mass. App. Div. 483 (Marble v. Inhabitants of Clinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marble v. Inhabitants of Clinton, 1 Mass. App. Div. 483 (Mass. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Hibbard, P. J.

The plaintiff and the defendant, the latter acting by its Board of Health, entered into a contract on December 11, 1933, for the collection and disposal of garbage. The contract was for a period of one year from the date thereof. Included in said contract was the following provision:

“Upon the completion of the contract said Marble is given the option to renew for a further term of one year.”

There had been prior contracts between the parties but whether such were valid or invalid is not now material. Before the expiration of the year, to-wit before December 11, 1934, there was a change in administration of the defendant’s affairs. The duties of the Board of Health and various other town officers were by appropriate action transferred to the Board of Selectmen, which body in November, 1934 advertised for bids for the collection of garbage. The plaintiff on November 17, 1934 gave written notice to the Board of Selectmen that he was exercising the option contained in the then existing contract to renew the same for a further term of one year after its expiration. The Selectmen however before December 11, 1934, entered into a new contract with one Crowley for the collection of the garbage. The plaintiff thereafter brought this action to recover for this breach and for the breach of a prior contract [485]*485dated December 10, 1929. This latter claim however is not now involved in the proceedings before this tribunal.

The defendant filed a general denial with allegation of payment. It further answered as follows:

“And the Defendant says that if any board or officer of the Defendant ever made any such contract for the Defendant as is mentioned in count 2 of the Plaintiff’s Declaration, a copy of which is thereto annexed and marked ‘B’, said board or officer acted, in so doing, without authority in law and in violation of the By-laws of the Defendant Town, and that therefore said contract was totally void and not binding on the Defendant.
And further answering the Defendant says that if any board or officer of the Defendant ever made any such option for the Defendant as is mentioned in count 2 of the Plaintiff’s Declaration and in the copy annexed thereto and marked ‘B’, said board or officer acted in so doing, without authority in law and in violation of the By-laws of the Defendant Town, and that therefore said option was totally void and not binding on the Defendant.”

It was agreed during the trial that the Defendant prior to any of its contracts with the plaintiff had “legally and lawfully adopted the following By-laws ’ ’:

“No Board or officer shall make any contract in behalf of the town, the execution of which shall necessarily extend beyond one year from the date thereof, unless special permission so to do has been given by vote of the town.”
“No town board, officer or committee, except as otherwise provided by law, shall in behalf of the town make any contract for labor, materials, or other expenditures for which no appropriation shall have been made at the time of such contract.”'

There was evidence at the hearing and the Trial Court found that in the “official report” of town officers for the year ending December 31, 1933, there was a report of the [486]*486Board of Health over the signature of the Chairman in which appeared on page 156 of said official report the following :

“The garbage contract has been given to Boy Marble of Berlin for another year at a salary of $2500. with an option for the year 1935.”
“Town Meeting Warrant: Article 1: To receive the reports of Town Officers and to act thereon.
Vote on the above article 1: It was voted on motion of Town Solicitor Peter J. O’Malley, that the reports of the various Town Boards and Officers as printed in the Annual Town Beport be accepted as the Official Acts of said Boards and Officers, and that one copy thereof be placed on file in the office of the Town Cleric. ’ ’

After the evidence and before argument both parties filed requests for rulings. Those of the plaintiff were as follows :

“1. The Board of Health of the Town of Clinton in the years of the contracts here involved was a board of public officers with statutory powers and duties and as such could not be unduly interfered with in the performance of these duties or in the exercise of these powers by any other board, officers, or even by the Town itself.
2. The Board of Health in those years was charged with the duty and was vested with the power of properly disposing of the town’s garbage so that said garbage would not menace the public health.
'3. In connection with the discharge of this duty the Board of Health had the power to make contracts for a term of years for the disposal of garbage, if in the exercise of reasonable discretion, the Board deemed it advisable to make such a contract. General Laws, Chap. 40, Section 4. In Re: Validity of By-law Article 17, Section 3.
4. This by-law does not apply to such contracts as are made by officers and boards on whom power has been expressly conferred by statute to make contracts extending more than one year.
[487]*4875. This by-law does not apply to contracts made by the Board of Health for the disposal of garbage in 1929 and 1933 under power vested in the Board of General Laws, Chapter 40, Section 4.
6. If this by-law was intended to apply to the power of the Board of Health to make contracts for the disposal of garbage, the by-law is repugnant to the aforesaid statutory provisions and is, therefore, invalid. General Laws, Chapter 40, Section 21.
7. If this by-law was intended to apply to the power of the Board of Health to make contracts for the disposal of garbage in 1929 and 1933, it was an unreasonable attempt to interfere with the discretionary power of the Board of Health and was therefore invalid.
8. This by-law does not come within the legal principle that municipalities may make by-laws ‘to regulate the form and manner of execution of contracts made in behalf of the city or town’, but is an improper interference with one of the substantive terms of the contracts in question in the case at bar. Clarke vs. City of Fall River, 219 Mass, at 585.
9. This by-law is an attempt to confer upon the voters in town meeting the power of fixing a duration of all contracts extending beyond the term of one year.
10. The town could not through its town meeting fix the duration of contracts for the disposal of garbage.
11. The town did not have the power at town meeting to refuse to permit the Board of Health to make contracts for the disposal of garbage extending beyond one year where such contracts were deemed necessary for the safe-guarding of the health of the citizens.
12. The contracts involved in the case at bar, if invalid when made, were capable of being ratified by the subsequent acts of the defendant town.
13.

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1 Mass. App. Div. 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marble-v-inhabitants-of-clinton-massdistctapp-1936.