Weymouth & Braintree Fire District v. County Commissioners

108 Mass. 142
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 108 Mass. 142 (Weymouth & Braintree Fire District v. County Commissioners) 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
Weymouth & Braintree Fire District v. County Commissioners, 108 Mass. 142 (Mass. 1871).

Opinion

Chapman, C. J.

The petitioners were incorporated as a fire district, in Weymouth and Braintree, by the St. of 1846, c. 118, and were duly organized and have for many years acted as such fire district. . The St. of 1868, e. 346, provides that fire districts formed of portions of more than one town may be dissolved in the manner therein stated. The petitioners contend that the latter act, if applicable to them, is unconstitutional, inoperative and void. But under the act first mentioned, the district became a municipal corporation, with limited powers, for a special purpose. There can be no doubt that the power to create, change and destroy municipal corporations is in the legislature. This power has been so long and so frequently exercised upon counties, towns and school districts, in dividing them, altering their boundary lines, increasing and diminishing their powers, and in abolishing some of them, that no authorities need be cited on this point. The Constitution does not establish these corporations, but vests in the legislature a general jurisdiction over the subject by its grant of power to make wholesome laws as it shall judge to be for the general good and welfare of the Commonwealth. These are not like private corporations, having chartered rights which are in the nature of contracts and cannot be altered without the consent of the grantees unless a right to do go is reserved. But the legislature may amend their charters, [145]*145enlarge or diminish their powers, extend or limit their boundaries, consolidate two or more into one, and abolish them altogether, at its own discretion. Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 192.

On January 25, 1869, the inhabitants of that portion of the district residing in Braintree voted to withdraw from the district under the provisions of the fifth section of the St. of 1868, and presented a petition to the county commissioners on January 12, 1871, being an adjournment of their December term, for a hearing of the parties, an apportionment of their debt, and a division of their property. It is contended that this petition was filed too late, and could not be valid unless filed within ten days after the vote to withdraw, which vote was passed January 25,1869. The petitioners contend that the limitation of ten days, in the fourth section of the act, applies to this proceeding. But the language of the fourth section will not bear such an interpretation. It relates to another renter. The fifth section fails to prescribe any time of limitation; and it does not appear that there was any unreasonable delay in the proceedings before the county commissioners.

The petitioners further contend that the petition to the county commissioners is not signed by the committee which was appointed at the meeting held January 25, 1869. But it appears to be signed by a majority of that committee, and the acts of a majority of such committee are valid. Sprague v. Bailey, 19 Pick. 436. Williams v. Sehool District in Lunenburg, 21 Pick. 75. There are other signatures to the petition, but they do not viti ate it.

The petitioners further contend that the St. of 1869, c. 417,

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Bluebook (online)
108 Mass. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weymouth-braintree-fire-district-v-county-commissioners-mass-1871.