HomeMy WebLinkAbout1898-1907 Town Records Book 12Town Records
Book 12
1898-1907
IDs: TC -08, PP 38
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Middlesex,ss.
In the Superior Co,irt within and for the County of
Middlesex, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine
and four.
The followinP. anendment to Article IV of the By -Laws of the Town
of Lexington,in our County of Middlesex, is presented to this Court for
approval, to wit: -
"The Board of Selectmen may at their discretion grant permits to
hawkers and peddlers,of the articles covered by Section 15 of Chapter 65
of the Revised Laws, upon such terms and conditions as said Board may
deem reasonable and proper, and every such permit shall be printed or
written, and contain the full name and address of the haerker or peddler
to whom it is issued, the article to be hawked or peddled, and shall ex-
pire within sixty (60) days from the date of its issue, and may be re-
voked at any tine by notice from the Board of Select:aen.
The Board of Selectmen shall keep a record of all such permits,
showing the date of issue, the nave and address of the party to whoa eaci
permit is issued and the articles to be hawked or peddled under each per
mit.
Every hawker or peddler who, without a permit from the Board of
Selectmen so to do, sells, offers or exposes for sale to any person on
a street, or on any public ground, or common, in the Town, any goods or
articles covered by Section 15 of Chapter 65 of the Revised Laws, shall.
be punished by a fine of not more than ten dollars ($10.) for each
offence."
Which said By -Law being read, seen and understood by the Court
is on this fourteenth day of April., A.D.1904, approved.
In testimony that the fore.going is a true copy of
Record,I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of
said Court, this fourteenth day of April, A.D.1904.
r
Ass't.Clerk.
BY-LAWS
OF THE
TOWN OF LEXINGTON.
BY-LAWS
OF THE
TOWN OF LEXINGTON,
APPROVED NOV. 26, 1888,
CHARLES
W.
S)'MOSD6,
PRIIVTER.
1PFF.
I
BY-LAWS
O3: THE
TOWN OF LEXINGTON,
ARTICLE I.
TOWN 5IEETINGS.
Notice of every Town Meeting shall be
given by posting a copy of the warrant
calling the same, in the post -offices and
two other public places in the town, and
by leaving a printed copy of the warrant
at every dwelling -house in the town, not
less than seven days before the day ap-
pointed for said meetiug. But in case of
any emergency arising, making it
neces-sary, in the judgment of the Selectmen, to
call a meeting without giving so long it
' notice, the said meeting may be notified by
posting copies of the warrant as before pro-
vided, and by leaving a printed copy of
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
MIDDLESEx, SS.
'. Superior Court, September Sitting A. D. 1888.
The Town of Lexington in the County of Mid-
dlesex, presents to this Court the following code
of By -Laws, to wit:
4 BY-LAWS.
the warrant at every dwelling -house in the
town, not less than three days before the
time of such meeting; and the return of
the person or persons appointed to distri-
bute the warrant, stating the manner of
notice, shall be indorsed on the warrant.
ARTICLE II.
RULES FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF TOWN
MEETINGS.
.SECTION 1. The Town Clerk shall al-
ways attend punctually at the time and
place at which the meeting shall have
been notified to be holden; and as soon as
twenty-five persons are assembled who are
qualified to vote in town affairs, he shall
immediately take his place in the house,
and call to order all persons who have
there assembled, and proceed forthwith to
read the warrant and the several articles
therein contained, in regular order, as
they may be there inserted, and also the
A
BY-LAWS. 5
return of the person or persons who noti-
fied the meeting; and if it shall appear by
the warrant that the said meeting was
legally called and duly notified, he shall
then call upon the voters present to bring
in their votes for a Moderator (if one is
required at the said meeting), and he
shall preside until a Moderator is chosen.
SEC. 2. Every person attending any
Town Meeting shall be seated after the
meeting is duly opened; nor shall any
person be permitted to stand in the aisles
betiyeen the settees, so as to interrupt a,
free passage to and from the desk; nor to
stand at the desk so as to annoy the Clerk,
Moderator, or any Board of municipal
officers, whose duty it is to preside at the
meeting.
SEC. 3. Every motion or order which is
of a complicated nature, or of unusual
length, shall be reduced to writing; and
also every other motion, whenever the
presiding officer shall desire it.
6 BY-LAWS.
SLC. 4. Every person speaking shall
address the Chair, standing and uncov-
ered; shall confine himself to the question
under debate and avoid personalities ; and
no person shall be permitted to speak
without first obtaining leave of the presid-
ing officer.
SEE. 5. No person while speaking shall
be interrupted by another, except it be to
call to order, to correct a mistake, or to
give notice of a reconsideration.
SLC. 6. No person shall speak more
than twice on any question -without first
obtaining leave of the house, except it be
to make some explanation or correct a
mistake ; nor more than once, until others
who have not spoken on the question shall
speak, if they desire it.
SLC. 7. Whenever any vote declared by
the presiding officer shall be doubted by
seven or more of the legal voters present,
it shall be made certain without debate by
BT -LAWS.
the presiding officer, who may proceed at
once to poll the house by causing those
who are in favor of the question to pass
directly in front of the chair, and after-
wards those who are opposed to it ; and
when the house shall be thus divided, the
Clerk shall duly record the number of
votes for and against the question respec-
tively.
SEc. S. In choosing a committee by
nomination, no individual shall nominate
more than one person on any one commit-
tee, if the person so nominated by hiid
shall be chosen.
Src. 9. No final cote shall he reconsid-
ered, except upon notice for that purpose,
by one of the majontc acting thereon,
given within thin} 111him d Z11 ter such vote
has passed; but after Aitch notice has been
given, any person who voted Ncitb the ma-
jority may make the motion to reconsider'.
(.
Sm. 10. When a question is under de-
bate, no motion shall be received butAo
8 BY-LAWS.
adjourn to a specified time, to lay upon the
table, to postpone to a time certain, to
commit, to amend, or to postpone indefi-
nitely, which several motions shall have
precedence in the order in which the}
are here named ; and the first two shall
be decided without debate.
SEe. 11. No vote fixing the period for
closing a ballot shall be reconsidered after
such ballot shall have commenced ; but
the time for closing such ballot may be
extended without such reconsideration.
ARTICLr I1I.
TOWN AFFAIRS.
SECTION 1. The Annual Town Meeting
shall be held on the first Monday in
March in each year, commencing at 9
o'clock A.M., anless the Selectmen shall,
for sufficient reason, postpone it to any
BY-LAWS. 9
other Monday during the same month,
and the annual reports ofthe Town Offi-
cers shall be printed and circulated with .
the warrants for the annual meeting.
SEc. 2. The Committee chosen to take
charge of the cemeteries, shall take the
general charge and superintendence of
the cemeteries, and determine the grades,
of the avenues and lots ; and make such
improvements by planting trees in the
avenues and around the borders of the
cemeteries as they may think proper, pro-
vided they do not exceed the amount of
money devoted to such improvements.
They shall also designate and set apart
such portion of the general inclosure as
they may deem expedient 1'or gravel to be
used in grading the lots, the said gravel to
be taken under the direction of the
Super-intendent of the cemeteries. No per-
son shall be allowed to take gravel in ex-
cessive quantities, and no person shall be
allowed to so fill up or grade a, lot as to
interfere with the adjacent lots, or to ob-
10 BY -Laws.
struet the avenues or paths between the
lots; nor shall any two lots be united by
one enclosure, without the consent of the
Committee as well as the owners of the
lots respectively.
SEc. 3. The Sexton shall be deemed
Superintendent of the Cemeteries, unless
some other person be appointed by the
Committee. He shall, whenever direct-
ed by the Committee, collect whatever
may be due on the lots taken, and hold
the same subject to the order of the Com-
mittee; and the Superintendent shall aunn-
ally, in the month of January, make a
written report to the Committee, stating
the number of lots taken the past year,
the amount of money collected during the
same period, the amount due, and the
names of the delinquents, which shall be
submitted in a report presented to the
Town by the Committee at the succeeding
March meeting, in each year.
SEc. 4. It shall be the duty of the Se-
lectmen once every quarter, and as much
BY -raves. 11
oftener as they may think proper, to ex-
amine the books of the Treasurer, as-
certain the condition of the treasury, and
see that all temporary loans are paid in
clue season, and that the funds of the
Town are at all times available; and the
Selectmen shall keep a record of these
quarterly examinations, and report the
result of the same to the Town in connec-
tion with their report of the settlement
with the Treasurer at the end of the year.
SEC. . The Selectmen may authorize
theā¢Treasurer to borrow money tempora-
rily on the credit of the town, in anticipa-
tion of the collection of taxes, should the
same be in their judgment necessary, and
to give the note or notes of the Town
therefor, signed by the Treasurer.
12 BY-LAWS.
ARTICLE IV.
STREETS, POLICE REGULATIONS, LTC. ,
SECTION 1. No building shall be re-
moved over a public street without a writ-
ten permit from the Selectmen; and no
permit shall be given by the Selectmen
for the removal of any building, when
such removal will cause the destruction or
injury of any tree or shrub standing on j
the street, or owned by any citizen and
projecting over the street, unless the writ -
;ten consent of the person, on or in front
of whose premises such tree or shrub may
stand, shall first be obtained. The pen-
alty for breach of this by-law shall not
be less than five dollars, nor more than j
twenty dollars.
SEC. 2. If any building shall be re-
moved over or through any public street
or square, the owner of such building and
the person or persons moving the same,
shall be jointly and severally liable to the
nY-r.aws. 13
Town for all damages, costs, and expenses
for which the Town may be liable, or
which it may be compelled to pay, in con-
sequence of such removal, or of any ob-
struction, incumbrance, or injury occa-
sioned thereby.
Sm. 3. No person shall place or cause
to be.placed in any of the public streets or
squares, without a written license from
the Selectmen, any ashes, dirt, rubbish,
wood, timber, or other material of any
kind, tending to obstruct or mar the ap-'
pearanee of the street or sidewalk, under'
a penalty of not less than two dollars nor
more than twenty dollars for each offence,
and a like penalty for each additional day,
after Ire shall have been found guilty of a
breach of this by-law, that he shall suffer
such material to remian in such street or
square.
Sic. d. No person shall pasture cattle
or other animals, in or upon any of the
streets or ways of the Town, either with
14 ss -raves.
or without a keeper, under the penalty of
five dollars for each and every offence.
SEc. 5. Whoever shall tie or fasten a
horse or other animal to, or leave the same
standing by, any ornamental or shade
tree in or near any of the streets, lanes, or
public places of this town, so near as to in-
jure such tree, shall be liable to a fine not
exceeding twenty dollars for each offence.
SEc. 6. No person shall ride or drive,
or cause to be driven, any horse or other
.animal, or any vehicle, in, through; or
along any highway, street, public avenue,
or public passageway in this town, in such
a manner as to endanger or unreasonably
incommode travellers, nor in any event at
a greater rate of speed than ten miles an
hour, under a penalty not exceeding
twenty dollars for each offence.
SEc. 7. No person shall ride, drive,
wheel, or draw, or cause to be driven,
upon any sidewalk, in such a way as to
BY-LAWS. 15
interfere with the free passage of all trav-
ellers, a coach, cart, velocipede, bicycle,
tricycle, or any carriage of burden or
pleasure ; and no person shall in any
event ride on any sidewalk, any bicyele,
except for the purpose of going to or
from the highway directly across the side-
walk from or to private grounds. Who-
ever is found guilty of a breach of this
by-law, or any provision thereof, shall be
liable to a fine not exceeding twenty dol-
lars for each offence
Src. 8. The Selectmen shall appoint
annually two or more Police Officers,
whose special duty it shall be to see that
these police regulations are duly enforced,
and to make complaints under these by-
law, who shall also have the same powers
that constables now have, except as to the
service of civil processes, and who shall
remain in office until others are appointed
in their stead, subject to removal by the
Selectmen.
16 BY-LAWS.
SEC. 9. The Police Officers shall receive
from the town such compensation as the
Selectmen may deem reasonable.
SEc. 10. They shall disperse all gather-
ings n the streets, or elsewhere, by day
or night, of noisy men or boys, and may
and shall take into custody all disorderly
persons, and persons found wandering at
unreasonable hours, and in suspicious
places, and hold them in custody until
they can be brought before a magistrate
for examination.
SEc. 11. Whoever behaves himself in a
rude or disorderly manner, or uses pro-
fane, indecent, or insulting language, in
any public place in the town, or in or near
any dwelling house or other building
not his own, or upon any private grounds
or premises, shall for each offence pay a
fine not exceeding twenty dollars.
SEc. 12. Whoever wilfully stands on
any sidewalk or travelled place in such
BY-LAWS. 17
manner as to impede the free passage of
travellers, after being requested by a police
officer to move on, shall be subject to a
fine of not more than five dollars ; and
whenever three or more persons shall
stand in a group or near each other on
any sidewalk or travelled place in such a
manner as to interfere unreasonably with
the Iree passage of travellers, they shall, `
if persisting in so doing after a request to
move along made by a police officer, sev-
erally incur a like penalty for each offence.,
Shc. 13. All idle or disorderly children'
who shall misspend their time in the
streets or fields during school -hours ; and
all persons who shall, by day or night, con-
gregate noisily in or about the streets,
stores, or public places of the town, or
disturb the public quiet by the unauthor-
ized ringing of the church or other bells,
or in any improper manner, or who shall
at any time deface, pull down, or injure
any building, fence, or sign, or other struc-
ture, in this town, not tinder his own
18 BY-LAWS.
rightful control, or shall trespass on any
property, real or personal, or wrongfully
remove therefrom, or injure thereon, any
tree, plant, shrub, fruit or vegetable, or
who shall create any disturbance of or
in any lawful meeting of the citizens of
this town, shall for each and every one of
such offences, be severally liable to a fine
not exceeding twenty dollars.
ARTICLE V.
TRUANCY, ETC.
SECTION 1. The provisions of the forty-
eighth chapter of the Public Statutes of
this Commonwealth so far as applicable
to truant children, to absentees from
school, and to the care and education of
neglected children, and all Acts in addi-
tion to, or in amendment thereof, are
hereby adopted.
SEC. 2. All children between the ages
of seven and fifteen years, residing in the
town, and who may be found wandering
BY -11A w n. 19
about in structs or lntblic places therein.
having no hmful emplo'vment or business,
not attending school. and growing up in
ignorance, shall be conunittud to. the
House of Reformation for Juvenile Of-
fenders, in the City of Lowell in this Com-
monwealth, for it term not exceeding two
Years.
SEC. 3. TWO or more truant officers
shall be appointed mutually-, whose duty it
shall be to inquire into all violations of
the truant laws, and of the haw relatin< tt1
compulsory education, nud to do all the
nets required of thcut be I He linv- of the
Cornnlou fecal tl i.
SEC. 4. 11 shall be the dutc of c\erc
truant officer, prior to makint{ ;111.\ cuni-
plaint mldee these laws, to uotifthe tru-
ant or the abscirtec from school, aleo Liv
parent or guardian, of the offense com-
mitted, and of the penalty therefor ; and
if the truant officer can obtain satislaeumc
pledges for the restraint and reformation
20 BY-LAWS.
of the child, he may forbear to prosecute,
vo long as such pledges are faithfully kept. >
SEC. 5. It shall be the duty of the .
School Committee, the teachers of the j
public schools, and the citizens generally,
to aid the truant officers as far as possible
in the discharge of their duty.
SEc. 6. It shall be the duty of the tru-
ant officers to keep a full record of all
their official acts, and make an annual
ieport thereof to the School Committee,
who shall publish the same with their own
report.
SEC. 7. Nothing in these By -Laws shall
be so construed as to alter or impair the
obligation and duty of teachers to enforce
punctuality and regularity of attendance,
and to preserve good order and discipline.
SEC. 8. The House of Reformation for
Juvenile Offenders, above named, is hereby
provided and assigned not only as a suitable i
BY-LAWS. 21
place for the commitment of persons con-
victed of any of the offences mentioned in
Section 2 of this Article, but also (under
Section 18 of said Chapter 48) as an in-
stitution of instruction for children under
sixteen years of age, who by reason of the
neglect, crime, drunkenness, or other vices
of parents, or from orphanage, are suffered
to be growing up without salutary paren-
tal control and education, or in circum-
stances exposing thein to lead idle and
dissolute lives ; and such children may be
committed, by the Court or Magistrate
hawing jurisdiction of the case, to said
institution, there to be kept, educated and
cared for, for a term not extendingbeyond
the age of twenty-one years for boys, or
eighteen years for girls.
SEc. 9. The Selectmen are hereby di-
rected to make all arrangements and
contracts with the managers of said House
of Reformation or other proper authorities.
necessary to carry out and enforce the pro-
visions of these by-laws.
22 BY-LAWS.
ARTICLE VI.
All existing by-laws and votes of the
town which conflict with or are inconsis-
tent with these by-laws are hereby re-
pealed.
BY-LAWS. 23
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Middlesex ss. Superior Court.
The foregoing by-laws were filed in
Court on the third day of November,
A. D. 1888, and now on the twenty-sixth
day `of the same November, are approved. '
By the Court.
THEO. C. HURD,
Clerk.
In testimony that the foregoing is a
true copy of record, I hereto set
[L. s.] my hand and the seal of said Court,
this twenty-sixth day of November,
A. D., 1888.
THEO. C. HURD,
Clerk.
24 NOTES.
NOTES.
[Reprinted from Edition of By -Laws published in 1873.1
Though Town Meetings as well as legisla-
tive assemblies require rules for their gov-
ernment, it is manifest that many of the
rules of the latter bodies cannot apply to the
former. A legislative body consists of two
branches, occupying separate halls, continu-
ing in session from day to day, and originat-
ing its own business at pleasure; while a
Town Meeting is a collection of citizens con-
vened in one room to act on specified sub-
jects, and generally continuing in session
but a few hours. It is obvious, therefore,
that many provisions in the code of Parh.a-
mentary Law, a code designed expressly for
a legislative assembly, are not applicable to
a primary meeting in our little municipali-
ties.
Among the rules or motions of frequent
application in the one, and of rare use in the
other, is that of adjournment. In a parlia-
mentary- assembly one of their first acts is to
NOTES. 627
fix the hour for the commencement of their
daily session, so that with them a motion to
adjourn is simply to take a recess till the
next meeting. In a Town Aleeting, where no
time for a future session is fixed, a motion to
adjourn is a misnomer, being in fact a motion
to dissolve the meeting and one that cannot
be put till all pending motions are disposed of.
Nothing, perhaps, gives rise to more fre-
quent debate in our primary assemblies than
the precedence of certain co -existing or pend-
ing motions. And though there may be. no
absolute principle by which to decide all'
theee questions, there is one fundamental
consideration which will dispose of some of
them and c:%st light upon all. The motions
to which we refer, and which may all be
pending at the same time, are " to lay on the
table," "to amend," "to commit," "to post-
pone to a day certain," "to postpone to the
next meeting," or which is the same thing,
. to postpone indefinitely." The considera-
tion which should have great weight in de-
ciding the precedence of these motions is
this: the meeting is designed to transact
business, and a motion to facilitate business
9M NOTES.
takes precedence of a motion to obstruct or
defeat it.
A motion to lay on the table may be de-
signed to obtain further information, or to
accommodate a friend of the measure who is
absent, or must leave immediately ; a motion
to amend is designed to make the measure
more acceptable, and so encourage its pas-
sage ; a motion to commit may be the most
expeditious mode of perfecting the measure ;
' a motion to postpone to a time certain, if `that
time falls within the probable duration of
the meeting, may have for its object the ob-
taining of further information which would
sustain the measure and secure its passage.
But a motion to postpone to the next meet-
ing, that is, beyond the session, or to postpone
indefinitely, can have no other object than to
defeat action, and so cannot, according to
parliamentary principles, be put till all the
pending motions are disposed of. And even
if the motion to postpone indefinitely is first
made, it may be superseded by any of the
motions mentioned above, though subse-
quently offered. An indefinite postponement
covers the whole subject, and so opens the
door to the fullest debate.
NOTrs. 27
It is frequently asked whether the "pre-
vious question" applies to a Town Meeting ?
It obviously does not, unless the Town has
adopted it as rule. The doctrine is this:
stopping discussion is in derogation of the
freedom of debate, and hence the previous
question does not exist at common law, and
can be applied only where it has been adopted
as a rule.