58 A. 44 | N.H. | 1904
No action can be maintained against the license commissioners as such to recover back either fees or forfeitures paid to their treasurer in the regular course of business, for there is no provision in the act which permits it. They are not a corporation, but public officers, and the treasurer of the board is the state so far as such money is concerned. Gross v. Commissioners,
Whenever public officers are performing judicial duties their liabilities are determined by the rules of law applicable to a judicial officer; so the test to decide whether or not public officers incur any individual liability for what they do or leave undone when they are performing judicial duties is: Would a judicial officer, having the same jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter, be individually liable for doing what they did? No action, civil or criminal, can be maintained against a judicial officer for any mistake he may make in the performance of his official *557
duties, provided he has jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter. Lange v. Benedict,
This disposes of the cases; but as both parties have argued the effect of the action of the towns in respect to raising the fees for licenses, and as the decision of this question will probably avoid further litigation, it has been considered. Currier v. Davis,
Section 31, chapter 95, Laws 1903, provides in substance that after the third Tuesday of May, 1903, the sale of liquor shall be lawful in such cities and town as shall accept the provisions of the act, and makes it the duty of every city and town in the state to act on that question upon the preceding Tuesday. Section authorizes "any city by vote of its city councils, and any town where this act is in force," to raise the license fees, but does not fix the time when this shall be done. The manifest purpose of this chapter is to permit each city and town in the state to decide for itself whether or not liquor may lawfully be sold within its. limits; and if it decides to permit the sale, to fix within certain limits the amounts those who engage in the business must pay for the privilege. Since the law fixes the time when the sale of liquor shall be legal and when towns shall vote on the question of permitting its sale, and provides that towns may raise the license fees without fixing a time for doing so, the presumption, in the absence of all evidence, would be that the legislature intended they might act on both questions at the same time. There is nothing in the act except section 32 which has any tendency to prove that the legislature intended that towns should act on the question of raising license fees only at a meeting called after they *558 had voted to accept the provisions of the act. It is clear that fixing the time when towns might vote on this question formed no part of the purpose for which that section was incorporated into the bill. At that time the bill contemplated that the sale of liquors should be legal in all cities until May 1, 1905, but only in such towns as voted to accept the provisions of the act. House and Senate Jour. 493. The words "any city . . . and any town where this act is in force may . . . raise the license fee," is but another way of saying that towns which decide to permit the sale of liquor may legislate in respect to license fees. The presumption that the legislature intended that all the provisions of the act should go into effect in cities and towns at the same time, and that it intended all licensees of the same class in any town should pay the same license fees, is evidence that the legislature intended that the power conferred upon towns to raise license fees as prescribed by the act might be exercised at the time of the decision that licenses might be issued. If it intended that towns should not vote on this question until they had time to call another meeting after they had accepted the provisions of the act, it must also have intended for the first year after the law was in force, either that cities could and towns could not raise the license fees, or that in towns the amounts to be paid for licenses should depend on the time when they were issued. The law contemplated that licenses should be issued in one week after a town voted to permit the sale of liquor. The warrant for a town-meeting must be posted at least two weeks before the day of the meeting, so that it would be impossible for a town to hold a meeting called after it had voted to accept the provisions of the act and before licenses could be issued authorizing the holders to sell liquor in that town for the ensuing year. It follows, that if the legislature intended that towns should not act on the question of raising the fees except at a meeting called after they had voted to permit the sale of liquor, it must also have intended that those who had obtained licenses before the town could act on that question should pay the fees prescribed by the act, and those who were unable to procure licenses until after the town had voted should pay the fees fixed by the town; for there is no provision in the act which permits the commissioners to recall licenses if a town votes to raise the fees after they are issued, nor one which permits them to issue licenses for the fees prescribed in the act after the town has voted to increase them. It is clear that the legislature intended that towns should act in respect to raising license fees before licenses could be issued, and there is no reason why they should not have done it at the time they did.
If the article in the Enfield warrant gave the voters notice that *559
raising the license fees was one of the matters to be acted on at the meeting, it is sufficient. Baker v. Shephard,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.