89 A. 302 | N.H. | 1913
The defendants' claim that the court has no jurisdiction because the board has not acted cannot be sustained. Half of the board have refused to seat the plaintiff. This action is as effective a denial of his alleged right as a unanimous vote of the board would be. The question presented here is whether the action taken is legal. More than this, if it is true that the board has not acted when as matter of law it must act, an order to that effect can be made. Relief either by way of declaring the plaintiff elected or compelling the board to act upon the subject could be granted. Sheehan v. Mayor and Aldermen,
The complaint is that the action, or failure to act, on the part of the board of aldermen has deprived the plaintiff of a seat in the board to which he is legally entitled. In order for the plaintiff to prevail here it must appear that in the course pursued by the board *141 there is legal error, as distinguished from an erroneous finding of fact. The contest having been referred to a committee of the board, a majority of the committee reported in favor of the defendant Crompton, and a minority in favor of the plaintiff. By votes of four to four, the board refused to adopt each of the reports. This course resulted in a refusal to seat the plaintiff, and the question in this proceeding is whether, on the facts before the board, any conclusion but one favorable to the plaintiff could be reached. If there could not, he is entitled to such an order as will establish his right to a seat in the board.
At the hearing in the superior court, the presiding justice found that there were eighty-four undisputed ballots for each candidate, one for the plaintiff marked with a cross made with ink, and three so marked for both candidates that the intention of the voter could not be ascertained. The ballots were made a part of the case, and it was transferred without ruling. The contention now made is on one of the three ballots which the superior court found to be so marked that the intent could not be ascertained. An inspection of the ballot shows a faint and almost wholly erased cross opposite the plaintiff's name and a heavy cross opposite Crompton's. There is enough in the appearance of this ballot to warrant a finding that it was intended for Crompton. If the finding of the presiding justice, that the ballot did not convince his mind that the wish of the voter was expressed, was warranted, a different conclusion would not have been erroneous as matter of law. The question to be decided was one of fact. And the important thing about it here is not how the superior court would or did decide it, but how it was decided by the board of aldermen. The question being one of fact within the jurisdiction of the board of aldermen, the superior court has no power to review their action on it. Sheehan v. Mayor and Aldermen,
The plaintiff's contentions that Crompton is now estopped to claim the ballot in question because of what occurred before the board (Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen,
As the case now stands, the failure to seat the plaintiff may have resulted either from a correctible error of law, or from a justifiable finding of fact. It was incumbent on the plaintiff to establish the first proposition, and he is not entitled to relief until he has done so. Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen,
"Though not in the ordinary sense a court, the members of the common council are required in controversies of this character to judicially determine which contestant is entitled to the office. `When so acting, they are not emancipated from the ordinary principles upon which justice is administered.'" Rollins v. Connor,
"The plaintiff, on asking for a ruling which is correct in law and *143
is applicable to the case to be tried, has a right to know whether in deciding that case against him the judge did or did not act under the rule of law stated in the ruling asked for." Jaquith v. Davenport,
Under the practice in this state, the inquiry upon certiorari is not confined to the record in the court below. Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen,
The question presented is one of proceeding according to well recognized precedents, limiting the power of certain judicial tribunals. The power of this board is to decide who was elected. But that power must be exercised judicially. A decision cannot be rendered without evidence, nor in disregard of settled rules of law. It seems too plain for argument that, upon request seasonably made, *144 it is the duty of such a tribunal to specifically pass upon the material issues of law presented. In no other way can justice be obtained with any reasonable degree of certainty.
It does not appear that such request was made in this case. Ordinarily, this would be treated as a waiver of the right to obtain a ruling. But in view of the rather indefinite practice which has obtained in trying these cases, it may be that justice requires that the plaintiff be given further opportunity to present his claims to the court in which the facts were tried. Whether the petition should be disposed of by further proceedings in the superior court, or be continued to await the result of further proceedings before the board of aldermen, is a matter to be disposed of by the superior court.
Case discharged.
All concurred.