63 N.H. 378 | N.H. | 1885
Upon the question which of the parties received a plurality of votes for the office, the record of the declared vote is, in this suit, merely evidence. If the record of the declaration of the moderator in the case of town and school-district officers, and of the canvassing board appointed by law in the case of other officers, were conclusive, this proceeding could never be maintained to test the right to an elective office. It cannot be instituted until possession of the office is taken (Osgood v. Jones,
Whether there may be cases in which the law does not require an information to be issued or the writ to be granted, although it appears that the defendant is not entitled to the office, as where a determination of the proceedings cannot be reached until after the expiration of the term of office, or where greater public mischief would be done by granting than by refusing the writ (People v. Sweeting, 2 Johns, 185; People v. Loomis, 8 Wend. 396; Commonwealth v. Athearn,
Information granted.
All concurred.