2 N.H. 251 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1820
The decision of this cause depends on the extent of those general powers, which are by law entrusted to selectmen. •
Tl e only statute, defining those powers, was passed February 8th, 1791(1) * and it provides, that46 selectmen shall have the ordering and managing of all the prudential affairs” of their respective towns.
The nature of town corporations is such, that many of their acts must be performed by agents. The members cannot with convenience often assemble ; and as the economy of towns, in respect to their various interests, requires constant superin.endcnce, it became proper for the legislature to appoint general agents over all their “ prudential affairs.”
Pecuniary matters, as well as other subjects of internal police, may v/ell be embraced under a strict definition of th •; t.ord “ prudential.” Such subjects demand the most constant attention ; and the deep interest they excite in' all would require that the agency over them should be permanent, and be vested in persons of intelligence, of character, and responsibility.
Selectmen are presumed to be such persons, because towns aré forbidden to fill: that office with-any, but men “ able and discreet, of good conversation, and freeholders inhabiting in such totvn.”(2)
1 L-?y are chosen, too, by a voluntary selection of the tow re fiemteives ; and as the towns who chose them are meet concerned in their conduct, it ought not ⅛ be expected, l.ju ⅛ wed v c of these corporations will often be jeop-íL-.ií.í d. by being placed, by their own choice and deliberation., in ignorant er unfaithful hands.
Again, selectmen act under an official oath ; and for gross neglect of duty, or for misfeasance, they are doubtless, in their individual capacity, answerable to the corporation.
With these checks and securities, we can foresee no evil from an enlarged construction of the general agency of selectmen, in respect to the pecuniary transactions of their respective towns.
It is probable, that under such impressions, the legislature, in the. sta tute before cited,(l) proceeded to empower them to officiate as treasurer, when no treasurer is “ particularly chosen.”
But it does not follow, that, because “ the ordering and managing of all the prudential affairs” of towns is confided to them, there is no limit to their power.
The towns themselves, in their corporate capacity, can alone transact some pecuniary business; in respect to some other, the towns can, by special votes, impose restraints on their general agents; and the very nature of this general agency, and of the affairs to be managed, must also coniine selectmen to such acts or business as belong to the agency, as are necessary to the discharge of its duties, and as, in the exercise of a sound discretion, would be proper.
in the present case, it is not relevant to examine and specify all those acts. It suffices that, in our opinion, the act done by the plaintiff, in paying existing debts of the town, was one of them. -
The true state of the case is this. He was -a selectman of Deerfield. The town was indebted to divers creditors, He has in fact advanced money to discharge their claims ; and hss having done this by means of Burbank, one of his brethren, does not alter the gist of the transaction from what it would have been, had the plaintiff employed some other third person, to whom he afterwards gave a note for what was advanced, and subsequently paid that note. Though the note was secured by the signature of the third selectman. yet the plain till alone paid it ; and consequently he alone having advanced money in behalf of the town, which
Were this transaction so viewed as io make the note valid, and the signers sureties for the town, the consequence would still b.e, (hat when one of two sureties fora third person has paid the debt, he alone may prosecute for indemnity. But when the whole business is regarded as a payment by the plaintiff, through- .Burbank, on behalf of the town ; (and such is its real nature, if we consider that Bur-hank's acts were adopted by the plaintiff, and the money paid to his endorsee by the plaintiff alone) it becomes useless to decide,whether selectmen are or are not ex officio empowered to bind their respective towns by negotiable notes, or by any other express promise in writing. There would not seem to be much necessity for an extension of their authority to negotiable itotes, and there certainly would be sóme danger attending its cxercise.(l) Yet, whatever might be our opinion, when the question arises, this case may be deemed the mere payment by one selectman, with the approbation of his brethren, of debts then justly due from the town, and which, for aught that appears, should, in the.exercise of a sound discretion, have at that time been paid. The present action is only to recover what he has thus paid out and expended in behalf of the town. The corporate in-uresis can in no way be jeopardized by holding that the action lies. Because the justness of the debts and the propriety of their payment at the time are both subjects of examination in this suit ⅛ and if, on inquiry, they were not due, or their payment should have been delayed in consequence of their peculiar character, or of specific instructions from die town, the selectman, who pays them, would go beyond the spirit of his general agency concerning pecuniary matters ; and, therefore, as he would then perform only a voluntary courtesy, he must depend on the voluntary liberality of the town for remuneration.
Judgment en ike verdict.