39 N.H. 295 | N.H. | 1859
The first exception is well taken. The record of the town-clerk is: “ Chose Amos Weston, Jr., J. T. P. Hunt, Hiram Brown,selectmen.” It has been settled that this is not a sufficient record to show that the selectmen were elected by ballot, and by major vote, as the statute requires they should be. Rev. Stat., ch. 34, sec. 2; Comp. Laws 105; Scammon v. Scammon, 28 N. H. 419. But it is equally well settled that whether the selectmen were duly elected or not, or whether the record would be sufficient or not in a case where the selectmen were parties, and the fact of their due election were material, yet, that when the selectmen are not parties to the action, but their authority comes incidentally in question between other parties, it is enough merely to show that they were acting officers, and the regularity of their selection cannot be inquired into. Baker v. Shephard, 24 N. H. 212, and other eases cited by the plaintiff’s counsel. And it is claimed in this case that, even though the record
The second exception is one that cannot be sustained. It would seem that the defendants had overlooked the provision of the statute upon the subject. The argument of counsel is that the laying out of a highway by the selectmen is a judicial act, and not ministerial, and that the act was not of a private, but a public nature, and that therefore it must appear that all the selectmen met and consulted upon the subject, in order to have the final action of a majority binding and conclusive. The difference in the rule to be applied when an authority is conferred to do an act of a public nature, from the one applied in case the act is a private one, is stated and considered in Despatch Line of Packets v. Bellamy Manf. Co., 12 N. H. 226, 227. The act of selectmen in laying out highways is of a judicial character, and of a public
The third exception we think well taken. There may, to be sure, be some question as to what the words, “ as now laid,” refer to in the record. • If they are understood to mean, as now made, or used, or staked out, then there is no further record evidence bearing' upon the subject, and the testimony of Brown was well enough admitted by the authority of Miller v. Silsby, 8 N. H. 474. This seems to be the' view of counsel, and • may have been of the eourt which tried the cause. But if the words, “ as now laid,” refer to the laying out by the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, of this street, prior to the attempted laying out by the selectmen, as, from the connection and the testimony of Brown, we think it must, then it would seem necessary to have produced the record, or a copy of it, to which reference is thus distinctly made in the laying out. It should have been produced as a part of the record of laying out, and in that case the testimony of Brown was improperly admitted, at least until such record had been produced. The description' of the laying out may undoubtedly be aided by such a reference as is made in. this ease, and such reference was properly made.
Neither are the defendants estopped, by having used and
Verdict set aside.
Bell, C. J., did not sit.