Inhabitants of Fayette v. Inhabitants of Hebron
Inhabitants of Fayette v. Inhabitants of Hebron
Opinion of the Court
— This isa case arising under the settlement and pauper laws of this Slate. The question reserved, and elaborately argued, is whether a person living on a plantation, on its being incorporated into a town, in 1792, thereby acquired a settlement in such town. The instruction of the Judge, who presided at the trial, was in affirmance of this proposition ; and the jury thereupon returned their verdict for the plaintiffs.
The counsel for the defendants argued, that the liability of towns to support their poor, is wholly dependent upon legislative enactment; and cites, in support of this proposition, the cases of East Sudbury v. Sudbury, 12 Pick. 5; New Portland v. New Vineyard, 16 Maine R. 71 ; and Thomaston v. Vinalhaven, 13 Maine R. 161. Mr. Chief Justice Weston, in the latter case, in delivering the opinion of the Court in reference to the proposition first above stated, remarked, that “ as the settlement of paupers depends upon the express provision of law, it might deserve very serious consideration whether a mode of settlement, so sweeping in its effect, should be established by construction,” and that, “ as no such provision existed in any former statute, this would seem to be a new mode of gaining a settlement.” And suggests that the opinions, intimated by the Court, in Bath v. Bowdoinham, 4 Mass. R. 452; and Buckfield v. Gorham, 6 Mass. R. 445; were extrajudicial, and not necessarily connected with the decisions in those cases.
The counsel for the defendants further contends, inasmuch as it has been held in Massachusetts, that the settlement of those residing in districts, when incorporated into towns, was not altered; so the settlement, before the statute of 1793, of the inhabitants of plantations, could not be altered by their being incorporated into towns. This argument depends upon the supposed similitude of districts to plantations. Districts, by the statutes of Massachusetts, in reference to legal settlements and paupers, were placed upon a par with towns. They
In regard to the gaining a settlement, before 1793, by living in a plantation, at the time of its incorporation into a town, the cases cited on the part of the plaintiffs, seem to exhibit a series of juridical opinions, tending very strongly to the support of the ruling of the Court at the trial in this case. That the liability, on the part of towns to support their paupers, depends upon legislative enactment, is undeniable. No town could otherwise be bound to afford aid to any individual in distress. The statute creates the duty; and renders the inhabitants of every town liable to relieve all such as within their towns, may fall into distress, and stand in immediate need of relief. When such relief is afforded, it becomes a question, whether the expense shall, ultimately, fall upon the town affording it, or be reimbursed by some other town. To determine this, it must be ascertained where the individual relieved has his legal settlement. With a view to this, the legislatures of Massachusetts and Maine have, at different times, determined prospectively, by their enactments, what shall be requisite to constitute a legal settlement in any particular town. The legislature of this State, by an act of the twenty-first of March, 1821, referring to statutes before enacted, made provision, that “all settlements already gained by force of said laws or otherwise,” should remain until lost by gaining others.
The inhabitants of a plantation, who were under no obligation to relieve any of their number who might fall into distress ; and who, of course, during such condition1, could not claim any such relief; upon being incorporated into a town, became at once bound to afford such relief, whenever occasion might call for it. If such incorporation did not give to each corporator a legal settlement in his new town, it would follow, that, in every case of a pauper relieved, the inhabitants would have a remedy over against some other town for reimbursement ; and this would continue to be the case until every inhabitant, who might become chargeable, had acquired a settlement therein, by some of the modes prescribed by statute ; and this would be so, notwithstanding the inhabitants had enjoyed all the aids incident to a town from its inhabitants, in the mean time; and during which time they could not become liable to reimburse any expense incurred for the relief of any of their number, who might fall into distress in other towns. It would seem incredible, that the existence of such a state of things could ever have been contemplated as admissible by any legislative body, anterior to the passage' of the statute of 1793. This renders it presumable, that, prior to the passage of that law, settlements must have been gained otherwise than by special enactments for the purpose; and that the incorporation of plantations proprio vigore accomplished that purpose.
Legal settlements in towns, by force of annexations thereto of parts of other towns, and the creation of one town out of a portion of another town, before the statute of 1793, have been repeatedly recognized as being thereby changed with the terri
The principle, that the incorporation of a plantation as a town, confers a legal settlement upon those, who, at the time, were settled upon it, seems but a corollary from the above cited decisions. And the direct avowal of it, in the two distinct instances, alluded to by Chief Justice Weston, seems to add great weight of authority in favor of it. And it seems to have been referred to by Chief Justice Mellen, in Hallowell v. Gardiner, 1 Greenl. 93, as being an acknowledged principle ; and the same may be said of the opinion delivered in Westport v. Dartmouth, before cited. Judge Sewall says, in that case, “ an act to incorporate, as a new town or district,
Judgment on the verdict.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.