The plaintiff seeks to recover for the support of a pauper having a settlement in the town of Northampton before its incorporation as a city. The liability of towns for the support of paupers is purely statutory, and a plaintiff, to recover in an action of this kind, must bring his case within the provisions of the statute. Under our legislation there are only two ways in which a debt can be created in favor of an individual against a town for relieving a pauper; one by supplying his wants after “notice and request to the overseers thereof” to provide for him, and their neglect so to do; the other by furnishing him necessaries under an express contract with its overseers of the poor, or its other duly authorized officers or agents. Pub. Sts. c. 84, §§ 2, 27. Williams v. Braintree, 6 Cush. 399. Lamson v. Newburyport, 14 Allen, 30. Rogers v. Newbury, 105 Mass. 533.
The first count of the plaintiff’s declaration sets out a claim under the Pub. Sts. p. 84, § 27, and alleges “ that she applied to the overseers of the poor of the said Northampton, and requested them to make provision for the maintenance and support of the said Michael O’Keefe, which they refused and neglected to do.” The notice contemplated by the statute and alleged in the declaration is an express and formal notice, and the request intended *116is a distinct request that the town provide for the pauper; and the right to recover for support furnished, after neglect or refusal in such a case, is founded on the failure of the town to do its duty, and the consequent necessity, in the interest of humanity, that aid be rendered by an individual. Walker v. Southbridge, 4 Cush. 199. No evidence that the plaintiff gave such a notice or made such a request was introduced at the trial.
O. G-. Delano, for the plaintiff. A. T. Orossley, for the defendant.The second count is in indebitatus assumpsit. The statute gives no right to recover under an implied contract in a case of this kind, and the inquiry comes whether there is evidence of performance of an express contract under which the plaintiff is entitled to compensation. The only evidence of any contract tends to show that one of the overseers of the poor, in the absence of his associates, agreed with the plaintiff to pay her “ to take the old man and take care of him as long as he lived.” The pauper lived, after that, ten years. The town had a poorhouse in which to support its paupers. It does not appear that the overseer had authority to bind the town by this peculiar contract; and, if he had, the plaintiff, to recover under it, must show that she took the pauper and took care of him in accordance with its terms. This she has failed to do. The uncontradicted evidence shows that the old man was then living with his son, the plaintiff’s husband, and that he continued to live with him for ten years afterward, the town all the time, with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, paying said son by the month for said support. Upon a proper interpretation of the evidence it appears that what the plaintiff did in caring for the pauper, she did on account of her husband, and as his wife, and the jury would not have been warranted in finding that she did anything in performance of the c.ontract testified to by her husband.
Plaintiff’s exceptions overruled. '