Inhabitants of Garland v. Inhabitants of Brewer

Mellen C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When a town does not elect any overseers of the poor, the selectmen are such ex officio ; according to the third section of the statute of 1821, c/i.. 122. As it does not appear that the town of Garland had elected any oversers of the poor, we presume they had not ; and therefore the notice given in the present case, signed by Isaac Wheeler as chairman of the selectmen, is not objectionable on that account. But it is contended that if he had signed the notice as chairman of the overseers of the poor of Garland, it would have been fatally defective. We do not find any decision in Massachusetts which is precisely in point. The statute provides that the overseers may send a written notification to the overseers of the poor of the town where the settlement of the pauper is alleged to be. The form of the notification is not prescribed.

*199In the case of Westminster v. Barnardston 8 Mass. 104, the notification was signed by one of the overseers with the addition that he signed by order of the board of overseers, and it was held sufficient. The notification, thus signed, purported to be the act of the board; and though there was no proof that the notification was signed by one of the overseers by order of the others, the notice was of itself deemed to be a compliance with the statute provision. In the case before us the notification is signed by Isaac Wheeler, chairman, &c. This is a declaration on his part, that the notification thus signed is an official act of the board of overseers. The Court receives the notice and considers it tobe what it purports to be. The object of the law is to give official notice from one town to another ; so that the overseers of the town to whom the notice is sent may take such measures as they may think expedient with respect to the pauper. And in this view of the subject, we are satisfied that a notification signed by one of the overseers as chairman, is equally as good as one signed by an overseer by order of the board of overseers. In both cases the act purports to be, and is considered to be, an official act pfthe board ; and is therefore legal and sufficient.

The exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.