Town of Marshfield v. City of Springfield

151 N.E.2d 53, 337 Mass. 633, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 714
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 3, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 151 N.E.2d 53 (Town of Marshfield v. City of Springfield) 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
Town of Marshfield v. City of Springfield, 151 N.E.2d 53, 337 Mass. 633, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 714 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Marshfield seeks to recover from Springfield sums expended by Marshfield for old age assistance under G. L. c. 118A furnished to Mrs. Harriet Glover, mother of one Charles W. Glover. See G. L. c. 117, § 14 (as amended through St. 1939, c. 39, § 1), and c. 118A, § 8 (as amended through St. 1953, e. 462, § 1). Upon a statement of agreed facts, the trial judge found for Marshfield in the sum admittedly due, if any sum was due. Springfield appealed.

Mrs. Glover had her domicil in Springfield from prior to 1917 to 1943 and received old age assistance from Springfield from January 29, 1937, to October 1, 1943. She received old age assistance from the city of Newton from August 16, 1943, to November 18, 1943, from Westwood from November 23, 1943, to November 30, 1949, and from Marshfield from December 1, 1949, until her death on July 23, 1954. Springfield concedes 1 that she had a legal settlement in Springfield under G. L. c. 116, up to September 8, 1948. She has not resided in any one city or town for five consecutive years since January, 1937, without receiving old age assistance, nor did she ever reside outside Massachusetts.

Mrs. Glover’s son, Charles, enlisted in the navy in time of war on September 14, 1917, when he had his domicil in Springfield. He thereby acquired a settlement there. G. L. c. 116, § 1, Fifth, as amended. He was honorably discharged on August 22, 1919, and thus he and his mother became originally qualified to receive veterans’ benefits under the provisions of G. L. c. 115. He has not resided in Massachusetts since 1937.

The case involves a consideration of several interrelated sections of the statutes relating to settlements and veterans’ *635 benefits. General Laws c. 116, § 1, First, provides that (with an exception not here involved) “each person who after reaching the age of twenty-one has resided in any town within the commonwealth for five consecutive years shall thereby acquire a settlement in such town.” Section 1 is affected by the provision of c. 116, § 2 (as amended through St. 1946, c. 584, § 4), that, with certain exceptions, a person receiving public relief shall not acquire, or be in the process of acquiring, a settlement. General Laws c. 116, § 5, as amended by St. 1948, c. 624 § 1, provides that after August 12, 1911, “failure for five consecutive years by a person, after reaching twenty-one years of age, to reside in a town where he had a settlement, shall defeat a settlement acquired under” § 1, First. The last sentence of § 5 provides: “The settlement existing on August twelfth, nineteen hundred and sixteen, or any settlement subsequently acquired, of a veteran whose service qualified him to receive veterans’ benefits under the provisions of chapter one hundred and fifteen, and the settlement of his . . . mother, qualified by his service to receive such benefits, shall not be defeated, except by failure to reside in the commonwealth for five consecutive years or by the acquisition of a new settlement” (emphasis supplied). The issue here is whether anything in this last sentence of G. L. c. 116, § 5, as amended in 1948, operated to prevent Mrs. Glover from losing her settlement in Springfield, under the terms of the first sentence of § 5, by virtue of her “failure for five consecutive years ... to reside” in Springfield. It does not appear to be contended that she acquired any new settlement elsewhere after ceasing to five in Springfield. See G. L. c. 116, § 1, First, and § 2 (as amended through St. 1946, c. 584, § 4).

General Laws c. 115, § 5, as amended through St. 1951, c. 590, § 4, the last amendment prior to Mrs. Glover’s death which affected § 5 in respects here pertinent, 1 provides in *636 part, "Veterans’ benefits shall be paid to a veteran or dependent by the city or town in which he has a settlement, or, if he has no settlement . . . within the commonwealth, by the city or town wherein he resides; provided, that no benefits shall be paid to a veteran unless he has actually resided within the commonwealth continuously for three years next preceding the date of his application for such benefits, nor to any other applicant unless he has actually resided within the commonwealth continuously for three years next preceding the date of his application for such benefits, nor unless the veteran of whom he is a dependent has a settlement in the commonwealth or has actually resided within the commonwealth continuously for three years next preceding the date of such dependent’s application for benefits.” Upon the present record, Mrs. Glover during the period, 1949 to 1954, could not have received veterans’ benefits, under this provision, because her son had not lived in Massachusetts since 1937, and had plainly lost any settlement in Massachusetts at least by 1943. If subsequent changes in § 5 (see St. 1955, c. 305, § 1) would change this conclusion (as to which no intimation is made) they would be construed as operating prospectively only. See Lexington v. Commonwealth, 279 Mass. 571, 574; Pepperell v. Somerville, 321 Mass. 413, 414, n. 2. The record does not show any application by her for veterans’ benefits while her son resided or had a settlement here.

The decision of this case depends upon the construction, as applied to one in Mrs. Glover’s position, of the words "qualified by his service to receive such benefits” (i.e. under c. 115) found in G. L. c. 116, § 5 (as amended through St. 1948, c. 624, § 1). A problem of interpretation arises because, although Mrs. Glover’s son no longer had a settlement in Massachusetts, his service in the navy had been sufficient to enable his mother, at least while he and she both had settlements in Massachusetts, to receive certain derivative benefits under c. 115, § 5, provided that she satisfied the other requirements of that section and made application for such benefits.

*637 Little assistance in interpretation is afforded by the legislative history 1 of the numerous amendments of the several pertinent statutes. The sentence here under discussion of what is now G. L. c. 116, § 5, first appeared in St. 1916, c. 316, § 1, which provided that the settlement existing on August 12, 1916, of “soldiers and their dependents eligible to receive military aid . . . under existing laws shall continue . . . while said soldiers or dependents are actually residing in the commonwealth until a new settlement is gained in another city or town . . .” (emphasis supplied). The word “eligible” in this provision (as amended by St. 1922, c. 479, and St. 1925, c. 34) was considered in Pepperell v. Somerville, 321 Mass. 413, 415-416. This court there held that, prior to the 1926 amendments mentioned below, persons not eligible to be treated as dependents on August 12, 1916, by reason of then existing actual dependency on a person then or thereafter a veteran, did not receive the benefit of the protection against loss of settlement afforded by c. 116, § 5, even though such persons later became dependent on the veteran. This provision of what is now c. 116, § 5, was amended by St. 1926, c.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E.2d 53, 337 Mass. 633, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-marshfield-v-city-of-springfield-mass-1958.