Anderson v. Parker

64 A. 771, 101 Me. 416, 1906 Me. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 7, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 64 A. 771 (Anderson v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Parker, 64 A. 771, 101 Me. 416, 1906 Me. LEXIS 47 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This case comes up on the following agreed statement of facts.

Bill in equity to test the legality of a vote passed by the town of Skowhegan at the annual March meeting of 1906, authorizing the purchase by the selectmen of a lot owned by Richard W. Brown of said Skowhegan, on the north side of the Kennebec River in said Skowhegan, for the purpose of erecting a municipal building at some future time, and to restrain the selectmen from carrying into effect a contract with said Brown made in accordance with said vote for the' purchase of said lot.

Bill, amendment, and answer to be made a part of the case,

[418]*418The present town of Skowhegan was incorporated in 1861, by the Private and Special Laws of 1861, ch. 24, by the union of the old towns of Skowhegan and Bloomfield, the former comprising what is now the north side of the river, and the latter the south side, including the island. The act of incorporation was accepted in compliance with its provisions by both the old towns of Skowhegan and Bloomfield, at their respective annual town meetings in 1861.

The old town of Skowhegan, at the time of the act of union owned a town house on Water Street in said town. The town of Bloomfield owned no town house. The old Skowhegan town house sufficed for the purposes of the new town until 1866, and it is agreed that no town house has since been built nor any vote passed looking to the construction of one, until the present controversy arose, except as may be inferred from the following facts:

In 1866 Skowhegan Hall Association, a local private corporation was contemplating the erection of a block, to contain stores, offices and a public hall.

The warrant calling the annual meeting of the voters of the town of Skowhegan that year contained the following articles:

1st. To choose a moderator to govern said meeting.

2nd. To see if the town will vote to exempt from taxes the buildings proposed to be erected by the Skowhegan Hall Association and also to convey to said corporation the present Town Hall and lot in consideration of having a Town Hall in said building and pass all votes necessary respecting the same.

3d. To see if the towns of Skowhegan and Bloomfield, as constituted before the act uniting them was passed, will vote to have their Town Hpuse in said hall and pass all votes necessary respecting the same.”

The warrant directed the constable to warn the inhabitants of the town of Skowhegan, (this of course was the new town) and was properly posted and returned.

Under these articles the following votes were passed.

1st: Choose A. W. Wiles moderator who was duly sworn by clerk.

[419]*4192nd. Voted that the town convey the present Town Hall building and lot to the Skowhegan Hall Association, and also exempt the building proposed to be erected by said corporation from taxes in consideration that said corporation shall grant to the town a perpetual lease of the hall proposed in said building for all town purposes and also a room suitable for a town office free of rent, except as above provided and shall sufficiently guarantee that said hall shall be conveniently fitted up and kept in good repair while the building shall stand.

Voted that the selectmen be a committee to contract with said corporation in order to carry out the purposes of the foregoing vote with power to convey and contract for exemption from taxes as above named and do all other things necessary and proper to accomplish the said purpose.

3d. Voted by those that constituted the town of Bloomfield at the time the Town was united with the town of Skowhegan, that we consent to have a Town Hall in a place other than on Skowhegan Island.

Voted by those constituting the town of Skowhegan at the time it was united with Bloomfield that we consent to have a Town Hall in a place other than on Skowhegan Island.”

So much of the act of 1861 as applies to the present case is found in the following quotation. “Whenever the new town of Skowhegan shall vote to build a Town House, it shall be located on Skowhegan Island, unless a majority of each town as now constituted, shall otherwise decide.”

The phrase, “as now constituted” was intended to apply, not to the inhabitants, but to the geographical limits of the two old towns. That is, if new territory had been added before a vote upon this question was taken, the voters living thereon could have had no voice in deciding it. This act, however, required that a majority vote of those living upon the territory of each of the old towns should, in some way, be ascertained before the location of the town house therein alluded to, could be moved. But the act of 1861 failed to prescribe any method of warning the inhabitants, dwelling upon the territory of these two old towns, respectively, for separate town meetings, in which [420]*420the contemplated votes'mightbe taken. Nor do the Revised Statutes, generally, provide for the calling of any such meeting. Neither did the old towns, having lost their separate organizations in the formation of the new town, retain any power within themselves to act upon this or any municipal matter. The legislature, therefore, having omitted to provide any method of ascertaining a majority vote of the inhabitants of these old towns, in separate meetings, must be presumed to have left the manner of thus determining such vote to the exercise of a fair and reasonable discretion on the part of the old towns, acting together, in their municipal capacity, as citizens of the new town. No other way was open. This was also the early interpretation adopted by the towns themselves as manifested by what they did. For, in a little over five years after the passage of the act of union, the voters within the geographical limits of the old towns, acting in their corporate capacity as the new town of Skowhegan, recognized this presumption and issued a warrant for á town meeting to be holden on the 24th day of March, 1866, to act upon the several articles therein contained. And they did act upon them in the precise manner contemplated by the statute, so far as the vote upon the vital question of changing the location of the town house was concerned. The record shows that those who constituted the town of Bloomfield at the time the two towns were united, took a vote by themselves, upon this question, as prescribed by the statute, and that the old town of Skowhegan voted in the same way. Thus they voluntarily and understandingly and, so far as appears, without a dissenting voice, acted upon this vital question.

In view of the above statute, the interpretation given to it by the people themselves soon after its passage, and the manner of acting under the call, we are unable to discover any good reason for declaring the method of calling the town meeting 1866 illegal, or the votes passed therein invalid. ’

But the complainants go further and say that, even if the call of this town meeting should be held to be legal, article 2, above quoted, did not relate to a change of the location of the town house but to the disposal of certain town property and “of having a town hall in said building;” that is, the building proposed to be erected by the [421]*421Skowhegan Hall Association; and that article 3 was to see if they would “vote to have their town house in said hall.”

The statute under which this warrant was issued should be construed liberally.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 771, 101 Me. 416, 1906 Me. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-parker-me-1906.