Inhabitants of Mount Washington v. Inhabitants of Clarksburgh
Inhabitants of Mount Washington v. Inhabitants of Clarksburgh
Opinion of the Court
The only question in this case is, whether Bradford Pollard, the pauper, had a settlement in right of his father, in the town of Clarksburgh. This depends upon the construction of St. 1821, c. 94, which provides, that any person of twenty-one years of age, being a citizen of this or any of the United States, having an estate of inheritance or freehold in any town, &c. and living on the same three years successively, shall thereby gain a settlement in the same.
In order to come to a true construction of this act, it may be useful to compare it with that for which it was substituted.
This provision was a substitute for an earlier act, which it repealed, and the effect of which was, to give a settlement in any town to any person, having an estate of inheritance or freehold in the town where he dwelt, of the clear yearly income of three pounds and taking the rents and profits thereof three years successively, whether he lived thereon or not.
The difference between the two provisions will be obvious upon comparison.
In regard to the other point, the Court are of opinion, that the circumstance, that some relief was afforded to the inhabitant by the town of Clarksburgh, did not prevent him from acquiring a settlement in that town. We think the case is distinguishable from the two cases cited, East Sudbury v. Waltham, 13 Mass. R. 460, and East Sudbury v. Sudbury, 12 Pick. 1. In both those cases, the pauper had a settlement in other towns in the Commonwealth, when he first became chargeable, and those towns were notified that he had become chargeable, and upon such notice they were bound to remove the paupers to their own towns, and could not afterwards rely upon his residence when supported at their expense, or when they ought to have removed him. But, in the present case, it does not appear that the pauper had a settlement in any other town in the Commonwealth, or that the town of Clarksburgh had a right to call on any other town to remove him. Whether this distinction would be decisive or not, we are not called on to decide, because we find, that the pauper did reside three years successively, on his freehold estate, without including the time that he received relief as a pauper. This relief was furnished in August 1831, and he continued to reside in the same place till 1835. The circumstance, that the mortgagee obtained a judgment for possession on his mortgage, he never having taken out execution or entered under it, and the circumstance of the mortgagor’s agreeing to pay rent, in this respect, make no difference, not being, in fact, an interruption of the mortgagor’s residence.
Judgment for the plaintiffs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Inhabitants of Mount Washington versus The Inhabitants of Clarksburgh
- Status
- Published