92 A. 835 | N.H. | 1914
At the time of the attempted election of a superintendent of schools by the school board, a quorum of the board were present. It then had the necessary legal authority to proceed with the election, and if a candidate for that office had received a majority of the votes cast he would have been legally elected. It is assumed by counsel in argument that a majority vote was necessary for an election, and the case has been considered upon that assumption. But it is not necessary that the successful candidate should receive a majority of the votes of those present constituting the quorum; a majority of the votes actually cast is sufficient. Attorney-General v. Shepard,
This theory in the case of general elections is opposed to the statutory declaration that "blank pieces of paper shall not be counted as ballots." P. S., c. 34, s. 2. The purpose of the legislature was to exclude blanks from the count because, as it would seem, they are not votes within the meaning of the constitution (arts. 26, 30, 32). In Attorney-General v. Colburn,
The argument that such a ballot indicates a purpose of the voter to register his refusal to vote for the successful candidate overlooks *436
the fact that it is just as indicative of his purpose to concur in the result which the regular ballots disclose. It is difficult to see how it has any more effect upon the result than a refusal to vote, which is regarded, so far as it is important, as an acquiescence in the result. It has no negative effect. What the voter's purpose was is not apparent. It may have been one thing or another. He has not furnished sufficient evidence to enable the court to ascertain it, and the vote cannot be counted. Murchie v. Clifford,
Cases which apparently reach a different result upon a somewhat similar state of facts (State v. Chapman,
Petition dismissed.
All concurred. *437