- Hours of -Insane Hospital Day's Work - Half-holiday Sunday Employment - Work by
―
61
the Hour Appropriations St. 1906, c. 517, § 1, providing, in part, that "eight hours shall constitute a day's work for all laborers, workmen and mechanics now or hereafter employed by the Commonwealth, ... but in cases where a Saturday half-holiday is given the hours of labor upon the other working days of the week may be increased sufficiently to make a total of forty-eight hours for the week's work," does not require a nine- hour wage, and does not prohibit the employ- ment of laborers, workmen and mechanics by the Commonwealth for more than eight hours a day, when the contract for such employment is by the hour.
Such statute provides for an eight-hour day upon Sunday as well as upon other days of the week for persons properly employed upon that day, and does not restrict the employment of persons required to work seven days a week to forty-eight hours.
If a half-holiday is given, it must be a Sat- urday half-holiday.
If the appropriations for the maintenance of the Worcester Insane Hospital are fixed for the year, the trustees of such hospital are not authorized to exceed the same to comply with the provisions of such chapter.
2.
State Officers or Boards Work" Contract or Supplies
73
A State officer, board or commission must, under the provisions of St. 1906, c. 517, insert in every contract made by such officer, board or commission in behalf of the Commonwealth, excluding contracts for the purchase of ma- terials or supplies, a clause requiring that no laborer, workman or mechanic employed under such contract shall be required to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day, whether or not such contract is to be executed within the Commonwealth.
The words "materials or supplies" should be construed to include articles to be used in the creation of a mechanical structure, and upon which no work is to be performed under the contract.
3. Eight-hour Law ants Holidays 93 Under St. 1907, c. 269, amending St. 1906, c. 517, and providing that no laborer, workman
LABOR - Continued.
or mechanic employed by or on behalf of the Commonwealth or of any county therein or in any city or town which has accepted the provisions of R. L., c. 106, § 20, "shall be requested or required to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day or more than forty-eight hours in any one week, except in cases of extraordinary emergency," cooks, maids, or other domestic servants may not be requested or required to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day or more than forty-eight hours in any one week, except in cases of extraordinary emergency.
No workman, laborer or mechanic so em- ployed may be requested to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day, except in cases where a Saturday half-holiday is given, in which case the hours of labor on other work- ing days may be increased to make a total of forty-eight hours for the week's work.
Employees may arrange between themselves to substitute for each other in providing for vacation periods; but they may not be re- quested or required so to do by their employers if it results that such arrangement involves more than eight hours' work by any of the parties in any one day.
Where an employee at a State insane hos- pital, as a precautionary measure, is required to remain and to sleep in a room adjoining the room of a patient or a dormitory, the time of sleep is not to be considered as time on duty.
Employment of Children - Child under Fourteen Years of Age Certificate of Ability to read and 177 write Factory or Workshop Under the provisions of R. L., c. 106, § 28, as amended by St. 1905, c. 267, § 1, that "no child under the age of fourteen years and no Ichild who is over fourteen and under sixteen years of age who does not have a certificate as required by the following four sections certifying to the child's ability to read at sight and to write legibly simple sentences in the English language shall be employed in any factory, workshop or mercantile establish- ment, no school committee or superintendent of schools or other person is authorized to issue to a child under fourteen years of age the certificate above referred to, and such child may not at any time be employed in a factory or workshop.
Dumping Inspectors Civil En- gineer
420
44
Dumping inspectors employed by the Board of Harbor and Land Commissioners, whose duty it is to see that all material which is to be dumped in tidewater is transported and dumped in its proper locality, none of it being deposited in any other place," are not "work- men, laborers or mechanics" within the mean- ing of St. 1911, c. 494, § 1, providing that "the service of all laborers, workmen and mechanics now or hereafter employed by the common- wealth... is hereby restricted to eight hours in any one calendar day."
The further provision of such section that "engineers shall be regarded as mechanics within the meaning of this act" does not extend to or include persons who follow the profession of civil engineering.
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Cities and Towns Statute
Acceptance of
567
St. 1911, c. 494, providing in section 1 that "the service of all laborers, workmen and mechanics, now or hereafter employed. by any city or town which has accepted the provisions of section twenty of chapter one hundred and six of the Revised Laws, or of section forty-two of chapter five hundred and fourteen of the acts of the year nineteen hun- dred and nine, is hereby restricted to eight hours in any one calendar day," is not in force in cities and towns which have not accepted the provisions of R. L., c. 106, § 20, or of St. 1909, c. 514, § 42, but which had accepted the provisions of St. 1899, c. 344, a corresponding provision of an earlier law.
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LABOR LAWS Mercantile or Manu- facturing Establishment Res- taurant Establishment main- taining Lunch Room and Food Salesroom
455 An establishment which maintains a lunch room, and also a food salesroom from which supplies are sent to other lunch rooms main- tained by the same establishment at other places and lunches are sent to be served at certain high, Latin and normal schools, the receipts of such food salesroom being a little over one-eighth of the total receipts, is not, by reason of the maintenance of such food salesroom, excluded from the definition of "mercantile establishment" in St. 1909, c.
LABOR LAWS - Continued.
514, 17, that such establishment "shall mean any premises used for the purposes of trade in the purchase or sale of any goods or merchandise, and any premises used for the purposes of a restaurant or for publicly pro- viding and serving meals," and is not, therefore, manufacturing establishment," defined by the same section as any premises, room or place used for the purpose of making, altering, repairing, ornamenting, finishing or adapting for sale any article or part of an article."
44
a
LAND
Sale of, to Institutions, by Trustees at Profit See MASSACHUSETTS AGRICUL TURAL COLLEGE. 1.
LEGISLATION - Preparation of Draft by Attorney-General See ATTORNEY-GENERAL.
1.
LEGISLATIVE
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AGENTS
469
pensation The provision of R. L., c. 3, § 24, requiring the keeping of a docket for the entry of the names of legislative counsel and agents, that "such entries shall include the name and business address of the employer, the name, residence and occupation of the person em- ployed, the date of the employment or agree- ment therefor, the duration of the employ- ment, .. and the special subjects of legis- lation, if any, to which the employment relates," is satisfied by an entry that a person is so employed "on all matters of interest to the employer," unless the employment is for some special subject of legislation.
The provision of R. L., c. 3, § 24, above quoted, and the further provision of section 30, that an employer "shall render to the secre- tary of the commonwealth a complete and detailed statement, under oath, of all expenses incurred or paid in connection with the em- ployment of legislative counsel or agents, or with promoting or opposing legislation," are not complied with by a statement that a per- son is employed as legislative counsel upon an annual salary without a statement either of the amount of such salary or of a fair apportion- ment thereof.
LICENSE- Intoxicating Liquors - Li- censed Premises - Certificate of Inspector of Factories and Public Buildings Hotel Lodging House Ten or More Rooms
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319
above the Second Story
The provisions of R. L., c. 104, § 49, requiring that the certificate of an inspector of factories and public buildings shall be obtained before an innholder's license or a license to sell in- toxicating liquors may be granted for any premises, is not applicable, under R. L., c. 104, § 25, as amended by St. 1905, c. 347, and St. 1907, c. 503, § 1, to a hotel in which not more than ten persons lodge or reside above the second story.
In section 33 of chapter 104 of the Revised Laws, providing in part that "the owner, lessee, proprietor or manager of a hotel, which is not otherwise suitably provided with fire escapes, or a lodging house which contains ten or more rooms above the second story, shall place a knotted rope for use as a fire escape in every room of said hotel or lodging house used as a lodging room, except rooms on the ground floor," the words "which contains ten or more rooms above the second story" apply to and describe a lodging house, and have no reference to the word "hotel" in said section.
Keeper of Hospital for Care of Insane and Feeble-minded Suitable Person - Resident or Consulting Physician
359 Under the provisions of St. 1909, c. 504, § 24, that "the governor and council may, upon the recommendation of the state board of insanity, license any suitable person to establish and keep a hospital or private house for the care and treatment of the insane, epileptic, feeble- minded, and persons addicted to the intem- perate use of narcotics and stimulants,' a physician who is employed by the owner or owners of such hospital or private house as resident physician in charge, or who is on the staff of consulting physicians connected there- with, is not a suitable person to receive such license.
""
Steam Boiler or Engine-Owner or User - Operation Unlicensed
▬▬▬▬▬▬
Person Coal Shovelers
.
524 The provision of R. L., c. 102, § 8, as amended by St. 1907, c. 373, § 1, and St. 1911, c. 562, § 1, that "the owner or user of a steam boiler or engine shall not operate or cause to be operated a steam boiler or engine for a period of more than one week, unless the person in charge of and operating it is duly licensed," allows such owner or user, in the exercise of good faith and in an unavoidable emergency, a period of one week within which to procure a person licensed in accordance with the requirements of law; and by the use of such period, the owner or user is not there- after forever prohibited from availing himself under like conditions of such allowance.
The provision of R. L., c. 102, § 80, as amended by St. 1911, c. 562, § 2, that "to work with a licensed person there may be employed not more than one unlicensed per- son, who, in the presence and under the personal direction of the licensed person, may operate the appurtenances of a boiler or engine," does not require that coal shovelers, whose sole duty consists in putting coal under the boiler, should be licensed, since coal shovelers, or other persons performing the duties of mere laborers in handling coal used in the operation of a boiler or boilers, are not operating any appurtenances thereof.
563
son- Partnership Under the provisions of St. 1909, c. 504, § 24, that "the governor and council may, upon the recommendation of the state board of insanity, license any suitable person to es- tablish and keep a hospital or private house for the care and treatment of the insane, epileptic, feeble-minded, and persons addicted to the intemperate use of narcotics or stimu- lants," a license may not be granted to a partnership as such.
-
570
To operate Automobile - Revoca- tion Conviction Judgment of Guilty placed on File The Massachusetts Highway Commission, under the provisions of St. 1909, c. 534, § 22, that "a conviction of a violation of this section shall be reported forthwith by the court or trial justice to the commission, which shall revoke immediately the license of the person so convicted," is warranted in treating a judg- ment of guilty placed on file by the trial court as a conviction.
Vot-
LOTTERY Element of Chance ing Contest
582
An arrangement or contract entered into by a foreign corporation dealing in ponies, with certain merchants and managers of theatres within the Commonwealth, by which each such merchant or manager contracting with the pony company issues to every customer for each 25 cents received 25 votes, which may be cast by the bearer in favor of any contestant in a contest in which the person receiving the highest number of votes is entitled to a pony and outfit from such company, involves no element of chance, and therefore does not constitute a lottery within the meaning of the several sections of R. L., c. 214, which prohibit lotteries within the Commonwealth.
LYMAN AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS Trustees Lyman Fund Income- Purchase of Land
452
Title Under the provisions of St. 1911, c. 566, 3, that the Trustees of the Massachusetts Training Schools "succeed to the trusts, right, powers and duties" of the trustees of the Lyman and Industrial Schools, and of R. L., c. 86, § 1, that the board of trustees of the Lyman and Industrial Schools should be " a corporation for the purpose of taking, hold- ing and investing in trust for the common-
MARRIED WOMAN- Wife of Princi- pal as Surety on Official Bond . 260 See BOND.
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL
COLLEGE
State Institution
Trustees - Sale of Land to Institution at a Profit
308
To be a State institution implies that the institution, and the work it carries on, is directly under the control of the Common- wealth; that its officers are the agents of the Commonwealth, and that its property is the property of the Commonwealth; and the Mas- sachusetts Agricultural College at Amherst, a public charitable corporation organized under the provisions of St. 1863, c. 220, for educa- tional purposes, and having a distinct corporate existence, does not answer these requirements, and is not, strictly speaking, a State institution.
The trustees of the Massachusetts Agri- cultural College may not legally, as individuals, purchase land and later sell it to such institu- tion at an increased cost over the original price.
MASSACHUSETTS DISTRICT PO- LICE Chief - - Boiler Inspec- tion Department- -Chief Inspec-
-
tor.
492
St. 1906, c. 521, entitled "An Act to provide for the appointment of a chief inspector of the boiler inspection department of the District Police," which provides in section 1, in part, that "said chief inspector shall have super- vision over the members of said boiler inspec- tion department in order to secure the uniform enforcement throughout the commonwealth of all acts relative to the inspection of boilers and the examination of engineers and firemen," does not create an independent department, and the action of such chief inspector is under the jurisdiction and subject to the orders of the Chief of the District Police.
MASSACHUSETTS HIGHWAY COM- MISSION Motor Vehicles owned by United States Govern- ment Certificate of Registra- tion Fees
318
Under St. 1909, c. 534, which in section 2 requires the registration of motor vehicles, and in section 29 fixes the fees to be collected therefor, with the further provision that the Massachusetts Highway Commission "may issue certificates of registration for motor vehicles and licenses to operate the same to any member of the foreign diplomatic corps without the payment of the fees therefor," such commission is not authorized to issue a certificate of registration without the payment of fees for motor vehicles owned by the govern- ment of the United States.
MASSACHUSETTS HOSPITAL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED - Continued.
as one town is liable to another in like cases," does not limit the liability of such city or town to a period of three months next preced- ing the date of notice, as is the case between towns under R. L., c. 81, § 17, and such liability is not affected by want of notice.
MASSACHUSETTS
STATE SANA- Application
90 c. 222, § 1,
TORIUM Preference of Citizens Under the provision of St. 1907, that "preference shall be given to those ap- plicants who are citizens of the Common- wealth," the trustees of the Massachusetts State Sanatorium are authorized to give precedence in cases of tuberculosis: first, to incipient cases of citizens; second, to advanced cases of citizens; third, to incipient cases where the applicants are not citizens; and fourth, to advanced cases where the applicants are not citizens.
MASTER IN CHANCERY Removal from County Vacancy Ap- pointment See GOVERNOR. 3.
AND Hours of Labor tracts
See LABOR. 2.
Duty in Case of Riot or Other Disturbance of the Public Peace Militia Precept Discretion See RIOT.
See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
MEMBER OF LEGISLATURE Eligibility for Other Office See LEGISLATURE.
444
MERCANTILE ESTABLISHMENT Premises of Telegraph Company 412 Premises maintained by a telegraph com- pany do not constitute a mercantile establish- ment within the provision of St. 1909, c. 514, § 17, that 'mercantile establishments' shall mean any premises used for the purpose of trade in the purchase or sale of any goods or merchandise, and any premises used for the purposes of a restaurant or for publicly pro- viding and serving meals."
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