Bell v. Pike

53 N.H. 473
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 53 N.H. 473 (Bell v. Pike) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Pike, 53 N.H. 473 (N.H. 1873).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

The power of the court, by mandamus, to require the clerk of a town to amend his record so as to make it accord with the facts, upon application of any person who shows a legal right, is not to be disputed. The records are public records; and, when the rights affected by an error in them are of a public character, the writ would generally be granted, as matter of course, upon a proper case being shown, ex debito justitice. Bull. N. P. 199; Abbott, C. J., in Rex v. Mayor of West Looe, 3 B. & C. 283.; Rex v. Grampond, 6 T. R. 301; Tapping’s Man. 288, and authorities cited.

The applicant must show a clear legal and equitable right, and that there is no other specific legal remedy for its enforcement. Rex v. Nottingham Old Water-Works, 6 A. & E. 355; Rex v. Bishop of Chester, 1 T. R. 396; Rex v. Bristol Dock Co., 12 East. 429; Rex v. Coleridge, 1 Clfitty 588; Rex v. Archbishop of Canterbury, 8 East. 219; Rex v. Clear, 4 B. & C. 899; Rex v. Jotham, 3 T. R. 575; Rex v. Stafford, 3 T. R. 651; Rex v. The Justices of the North Riding of Yorkshire, 2 B. & C. 286. The object of granting the writ of mandamus being to prevent a failure of justice, and to provide an- immediate and efficacious remedy, it follows that it will not be granted, if, when granted, it would be nugatory, in accordance with the maxim, Lex non cojei ad inutilia. * * So the court will refuse it, if it be manifest that it must be vain and fruitless, or useless, or cannot have a beneficial effect. Tapping’s Man. 15; Rex v. Bishop of London, 1 Wils. 11; Rex v. Bishop of Exeter, 2 East. 462; Ld. Tenterden, C. J., in Rex v. Justices of Pembrokeshire, 2 B. & Ad. 391; Rex v. Whitaker, 9 B. & C. 648.

Some doubts might, perhaps, be suggested, whether the petition in this case shows such legal right in the petitioner, Mr. Bell, or, more accurately, whether it shows that such effectual relief would be afforded by the writ, as that it ought to be granted, in accordance with these well settled legal principles.

It is certain that this court has no power to determine who is legally elected, — the only authority in that regard possessed by any state officer being vested in the governor and council; and they are charged with little more than the ministerial duty of a board of canvassers, to count and declare the result of the votes, and issue a certificate of election to the person who has the largest number. The national house of representatives, like both branches of our own state legislature, is the final judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications of its members —Const. U. S., art. 1, sec. 5; and in no possible view could a judg[475]*475ment of this court in the present proceeding assume any higher rank, with respect to the rights of the two gentlemen who claim the office, than a piece of evidence, to be used before the tribunal, which is invested with authority to decide finally on their respective claims. It is plain, therefore, that the application stands upon a footing quite different from the great mass of cases in the books where the investigation is followed by a judgment settling conclusively the rights of the parties.. It is alleged, indeed, in the petition, “ that the selectmen, moderator, and clerk of said town made a certificate of the facts in reference to the correction of said record in said town, and, on the 15th day of April, 1873, filed the same in the office of the secretary of state, and requested that the same bo laid before the governor and counsel, when they were met, for the purpose of counting and declaring the result of the votes cast for said office ; that, on the 29th day of April, 1873, the petitioner applied to the governor and council, while in session, for the purpose of counting and declaring the votes for said office, to have said incorrect and-insufficient records and returns corrected by said clerk, and for the hearing such evidence as might be offered thereon, and that" the same might be corrected, and a correct record and return made, according to the facts of the case; that the governor and council had doubts as to their duty in the premises.”

This seems to suggest a practical result whereby the petitioner might profit; but the court are aware that the doubts entertained by the governor and council, in the premises, have been so far resolved that a certificate of election has now been issued in accordance with the result shown by the records and returns here claimed to be insufficient and incorrect. The object of the writ suggested by this clause in the petition therefore fails; and it seems quite clear that the petition shows no effectual relief which it is within the power of the court to grant, any further than a correction of the records might facilitate the proof of a fact upon which Mr. Bell may rely in another place for the purpose of showing his right to the contested seat, namely, the fact that more legal votes were actually given in for him than were declared by the moderator, and returned to the secretary of state by the town-clerk. We are not inclined, however, to place our decision on this ground, and the only object of these observations is to guard against any misconstruction of the case as an authority hereafter. At the same time, it is to be understood that we express no opinion to the effect that the right shown is legally insufficient, or that the relief sought is not of such a character as would entitle the applicant, upon a proper case, to have the writ. We have considered the case upon its merits, and our decision rests upon views of the constitutional provisions relating to the subject, which are concurred in by the whole court.

The question is raised by a motion to dismiss the petition. This is to be treated as a demurrer, in effect, whereby the allegations of the petition are admitted to be true. The case, then, is, that Mr. Bell received nine more votes in the town of Hopkinton than were declared for him by the moderator in the town-meeting,-and recorded and re[476]*476turned to the secretary of state by the town-clerk. If those votes had been recorded and returned, it would have made his whole number of votes two larger than the number returned for Mr. Pike, and in that event he, and not Mr. Pike, would have been entitled to the certificate of election. Further, these nine votes were in fact counted at the meeting, the mistake being in the declaration of the vote by the moderator.

It is not now contended but that it was the duty of the clerk to record the declaration of the moderator as made, and there is no claim that the record is in that respect defective or incorrect; but the contention is, that inasmuch as the count and'declaration did not agree, and inasmuch as the count was right and the declaration wrong, it was the duty of the clerk to make a record of both; and the amendment now asked is, that the count be entered upon the books of the town along with the record of the declaration of the moderator.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.H. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-pike-nh-1873.