Peck's Case

145 N.E. 532, 250 Mass. 261, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1172
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 532 (Peck's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peck's Case, 145 N.E. 532, 250 Mass. 261, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1172 (Mass. 1924).

Opinion

Sanderson, J.

This case was heard by a single member of the Industrial Accident Board and then by the full board on review. Upon certification to the Superior Court under the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act, a decree was entered April 10, 1924, adjudging that Nettie Peck, the employee, was a laborer employed by the county of Bristol and awarding her compensation. Bristol County appealed from this decree.

The decisive question on this appeal is whether Nettie Peck, the claimant, was an employee of Bristol County. She was employed at the tuberculosis hospital in that county, established in accordance with the provisions of St. 1916, c. 286 (G. L. c. Ill, §§ 78-91), and on August 14, 1923, received an injury to her hand while working at a mangle in that hospital. She testified that she received her pay by check from the hospital; and the doctor who first attended her testified that his bill was paid by the trustees of the Bristol County Tuberculosis Hospital. The county [263]*263treasurer testified that he was treasurer of the hospital, but that this was a separate office from that of county treasurer; that the funds are borrowed for the hospital and turned over, the money being raised from all the cities and towns in the county, except Npw Bedford and Fall River; that these two cities pay nothing toward its support, each having its own hospital; that the treasurer sends his checks to the superintendent of the hospital, who was appointed by the trustees in 1919; that patients from outside the county are received upon the payment of $25 a week in advance, and the charge for patients from Bristol County is $9.10 a week; that there had been a deficit which was made up by assessing the towns and cities in the “ district ”; and that the trustees' of the hospital have not accepted the workmen’s compensation act. The general superintendent and resident physician testified that he received his appointment from the trustees of the Bristol County Tuberculosis Hospital; that he has been secretary to the trustees ever since the hospital has been in existence; that the county clerk has nothing to do with the trustees; that when the trustees organized to establish this hospital there were present at the first meeting the three county commissioners, the county treasurer and the witness; that applications for admission to the hospital are made through local boards of health, and payment for patients from Bristol County is made by town treasurers by checks drawn to the treasurer of the hospital.

The county of Bristol, in 1913, accepted St. 1913, c. 807, providing for payment of compensation to laborers, workmen and mechanics. The act providing for the establishment of tuberculosis hospitals (St. 1916, c. 286) is entitled An Act to provide for the construction by counties of tuberculosis hospitals for cities and towns having less than fifty thousand inhabitants.” By its provisions, as afterwards amended, the county commissioners of each county except Barnstable, Hampshire, Suffolk, Nantucket and Dukes County were required to provide adequate hospital care for all persons residing in towns having less than fifty thousand population within their boundaries and suffering from tuberculosis. G, L, c. Ill, § 78. The responsibility for acquiring [264]*264land and constructing and maintaining buildings for such hospitals is placed largely on the county commissioners. In the counties where hospitals are to be established, they are required to erect one or more hospitals. G. L. c. Ill, §81. They are authorized to raise and expend money for acquiring land and constructing and equipping hospitals and for all other necessary purposes to carry out the provisions of the act. They may borrow on the credit of the county and issue notes to be signed by the county treasurer and countersigned by the county commissioners. These securities may be sold by the county at public or private sale, but the proceeds are to be used only for the purposes specified in the act which authorized the establishment and maintenance of these hospitals. The county commissioners are to apportion the cost to the several towns liable in accordance with their valuations used in assessing county taxes, and each town liable to contribute to the construction and equipment of a hospital is to pay its proportion of expenses into the county treasury in such manner as the county commissioners shall direct. G. L. c. Ill, § 83. By § 85 of the act the county must provide for the care, maintenance and repair of the hospital, the cost thereof to be apportioned by the county commissioners to the towns liable. In § 86 the county commissioners are authorized to purchase, lease, or take by eminent domain such land not exceeding five hundred acres as they deem necessary or convenient for the purposes set forth in the act.

Section 87 provides that the county commissioners shall be trustees of the hospitals erected thereunder, and shall make suitable regulations for their government, and shall appoint superintendents and other officers and employees necessary for the proper conduct thereof.

It appears from these statutory provisions that the entire cost of the hospital completed and equipped, as well as the annual cost for the care, maintenance and repair of the hospital, is to be paid by the towns liable. The towns thus liable in Bristol County are all the municipalities in said county excepting the cities of New Bedford and Fall River. The towns and cities subject to assessment, and whose resi[265]*265dents are entitled to adequate hospital care, are referred to in the act as the “ district served.” G. L. c. Ill, § 80. By § 90 of the act the mayors of Chelsea and Revere and the chairman of the selectmen of Winthrop are given the powers of county commissioners for the purposes of the act, and are designated a board of trustees for the “ tuberculosis hospital district comprising Chelsea, Revere and Winthrop.”

The case of Bauer v. Mitchell, 247 Mass. 522, was a suit in equity brought by four of the seven trustees of the Independent Agricultural School of the county of Essex against the three county commissioners of the county of Essex, who are the three remaining trustees of the school and who also constitute the board of trustees of the tuberculosis hospital of the county of Essex, erected and maintained under the provisions of St. 1916, c. 286. This suit was brought to prevent the defendants from constructing filter beds for the hospital on land appropriated for the purposes of the school. The land taken for the hospital is adjacent to that appropriated for the school, and the title to all the land used for the school as well as that used for the hospital is in the county of Essex. It was held on demurrer that the county of Essex was a necessary party. The ground of this decision was not that the tuberculosis hospital was a county institution, nor that the county commissioners as trustees were not proper parties, but that the county was the owner of all property directly or indirectly concerned in the subject matters of the suit and for that reason should be made a party. It was therein stated that it would have been appropriate for the county to be represented by counsel, different from those representing the trustees of the hospital.”

The fact that funds which paid the claimant came ultimately from certain towns in the county and not from the whole county is a circumstance to be considered on the question whether the relation of master and servant existed between the county and her, but it is not decisive. Chisholm’s Case, 238 Mass. 412, 419.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Mycock
52 N.E.2d 377 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1943)
Wanders's Case
31 N.E.2d 530 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1941)
Seaver v. Onset Fire District
184 N.E. 668 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 532, 250 Mass. 261, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecks-case-mass-1924.