By St. 1894, c. 399, § 1, entitled “ An Act concerning the storage of petroleum or any of its products, and the erection and use of buildings therefor,” “No building for the storage, keeping, manufacture, or refining of crude petroleum, or any of its products, shall be erected in any city or town, unless the mayor and aldermen or selectmen thereof have granted a license therefor,” etc. By § 3 of the same statute, “No regulations which the mayor and aldermen or selectmen have not now authority to impose shall be imposed upon or apply to a building or premises now and heretofore used for the business aforesaid.” By Pub. Sts. c. 102, § 72, it is provided that crude petroleum or any of its products may be stored, kept, manufactured, or refined in detached and properly ventilated buildings specially adapted to the purpose, and surrounded by an embankment constructed so as effectually to prevent the overflow of said petroleum.
The superstructure of the defendants’ building used for the above purpose, had burned down, and they were proceeding to restore it, when this suit was brought to stop them, as no license therefor had been granted to them by the mayor and aldermen; and the question which we have to consider is, whether, according to the true construction óf St, 1894, c. 399, § 1, it should be held that they were going on to erect a building, or merely to repair an old building.
There is no dispute before us as to the facts. The plaintiff in its brief says: “ Taking the sills, girders, and piling that remained after the fire, their value in the erection of a new building is twelve hundred dollars for the piling, and about two hundred and fifty dollars for the flooring, making $1,450. The building *390rested on piles. There was no dispute as to these figures; in fact, they were furnished by the respondents’ witnesses.” The cost of the original superstructure was three thousand dollars, but the estimated cost of restoring it was a little less.
It has sometimes been found hard to define the word “ building,”— see Stevens v. Gourley, 7 C. B. (N. S.) 99,—but in this Commonwealth the word has often been held to include partly destroyed or unfinished structures. An example of this is found in Watertown v. Sawyer, 109 Mass. 320, where it was held that the accidental destruction by fire, after the passage of St. 1871, c. 167, of the combustible parts of a building which had been used by its owner before the passage of the statute for carrying on therein the business of slaughtering cattle or other animals, did not forfeit the owner’s right to continue the same business in a new building of no greater size or capacity, erected on the same site, without the permission of the selectmen. It is true that the words of the statute were “ building or premises,” and for this reason the decision is not fully in point. In tax cases, also, a very liberal construction of the word has been given. In Trinity Church v. Boston, 118 Mass. 164, the work of building the church had been begun by driving piles for the foundation of the building, and no further progress had been made, when a tax was assessed by the city on the land; but it was held to be exempt, under the statute exempting houses of religious worship, the work of erection having been begun, and prosecuted without unreasonable delay. See also New England Hospital v. Boston, 113 Mass. 518, and Old South Society v. Boston, 127 Mass. 378. So under the mechanic’s lien law, if work is done in laying a foundation, and the construction of the building proceeds no further, no doubt the mason would be entitled to his lien. Truesdell v. Gay, 13 Gray, 311. Carew v. Stubbs, 155 Mass. 549. It is quite plain that a building may be partly under ground ; and in Attorney General v. Gardiner, 117 Mass. 492, a structure mostly below ground and only three and a half feet high, covered with turf, was held to be a building, within the meaning of a restriction against the erection of buildings. And in Commonwealth v. Squire, 1 Met. 258, it was held that a building need not be a completed structure.
In construing statutes in restraint of trades and business, a *391somewhat liberal construction is usually given in favor of persons who have established plants for carrying on such trades or business, and in view of the course of decisions in this Commonwealth, as shown above, we think that there was enough of the old building left after the fire to entitle the defendants to restore it to its former size and capacity, without obtaining a license under the provisions of St. 1894, c. 399.
A similar construction is to be given to the city ordinance relied on by the plaintiff. That ordinance prohibits erecting, adding to, or altering a building without a permit from the inspector of buildings, but necessary repairs are expressly excepted from its operation. It does not apply to the restoration of the building in the present case. The ruling of the Chief Justice of the Superior Court was therefore right.
Decree affirmed.