Lamson v. City of Newburyport
Lamson v. City of Newburyport
Opinion of the Court
The obligation of cities and towns to furnish relief and support to paupers is created by statute. No moral duty rests on them to give aid to the needy and distressed, and no legal liability exists except such as is derived from positive legislative enactments. Consequently no promise or undertaking on their part can be implied to pay for anything which may have been bestowed on a person standing in need of relief, unless it is shown to have been afforded under such circumstances as to come within the statutory provisions, by which towns are made liable for expenses incurred for such a purpose. By Gen. Sts. c. 70, § 16, it is provided that cities and towns shall be held to pay expenses “ necessarily incurred ” for the relief of a pauper by any person not liable by law for his support. This is the only enactment by virtue of which any claim can accrue to an individual against a city or town for money paid, services rendered or support or relief supplied for or on account of a person having a settlement therein. The claim must be proved to have been founded on the absolute necessity of a pauper; that is, it must be for such needful relief or support as the pauper could not otherwise procure or obtain.
The facts proved in the present case do not bring the claim of the plaintiff" within this provision. There was no necessity for the continuance of the pauper in the plaintiff’s tenement. She might at any time have had shelter and relief in the almshouse provided by the city. The plaintiff was not bound to permit
Exceptions overruled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.