Broderick v. Hunt

89 A. 302, 77 N.H. 139, 1913 N.H. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 A. 302 (Broderick v. Hunt) 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
Broderick v. Hunt, 89 A. 302, 77 N.H. 139, 1913 N.H. LEXIS 41 (N.H. 1913).

Opinion

Peaslee, J.

The defendants’ claim that the court has no jurisdiction because the board has not acted cannot be sustained. Half of the board have refused to seat the plaintiff. This action is as effective a denial of his alleged right as a unanimous vote of the board would be. The question presented here is whether the action taken is legal. More than this, if it is true that the board has not acted when as matter of law it must act, an order to that effect can be made. Relief either by way of declaring the plaintiff elected or compelling the board .to act upon the subject could be granted. Sheehan v. Mayor and Aldermen, 74 N. H. 445. The form of this proceeding is unimportant. Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen, 76 N. H. 187.

The complaint is that the action, or failure to act, on the part of the board of aldermen has deprived the plaintiff of a seat in the board to which he is legally entitled. In order for the plaintiff to prevail here it must appear that in the course pursued by the board *141 there is legal error, as distinguished from an erroneous finding of fact. The contest having been referred to a committee of the board, a majority of the committee reported in favor of the defendant Crompton, and a minority in favor of the plaintiff. By votes of four to four, the board refused to adopt each of the reports. This course resulted in a refusal to seat the plaintiff, and the question in this proceeding is whether, on the facts before the board, any conclusion but one favorable to the plaintiff could be reached. If there could not, he is entitled to such an order as will establish his right to a seat in the board.

At the hearing in the superior court, the presiding justice found that there were eighty-four undisputed ballots for each candidate, one for the plaintiff marked with a cross made with ink, and three so marked for both candidates that the intention of the voter could not be ascertained. The ballots were made a part of the case, and it was transferred without ruling. The contention now made is on one of the three ballots which the superior court found to be so marked that the intent could not be ascertained. An inspection of the ballot shows a faint and almost wholly erased cross opposite the plaintiff’s name and a heavy cross opposite Crompton’s. There is enough in the appearance of this ballot to warrant a finding that it was intended for Crompton. If the finding of the presiding justice, that the ballot did not convince his mind that the wish of the voter was expressed, was warranted, a different conclusion would not have been Erroneous as matter of law. The question to be decided was one of fact. And the important thing about it here is not how the superior court would or did decide it, but how it was decided by the board of aldermen. The question being one of fact within the jurisdiction of the board of aldermen, the superior court has no power to review their action on it. Sheehan v Mayor and Aldermen, 74 N. H. 445. How the aldermen viewed this question is not disclosed by the records of the board nor by the case. If four of them thought this ballot should be counted for Crompton, there was no error correctible by this court in their conclusion that the plaintiff was not elected. If a majority of the board thought the ballot should not be counted, it would follow that the plaintiff was elected, and a refusal to seat him would be an error of lawr and subject to review.

The plaintiff’s contentions that Crompton is now estopped to claim the ballot in question because of what occurred before the board (Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen, 76 N. H. 187) cannot *142 ■prevail. So far as appears, there was no agreement or concession of any kind when the hearings were had.

■ As the case now stands, the failure to seat the plaintiff may have-resulted either from a correctible error of law, or from a justifiable finding of fact. It was incumbent on the plaintiff to establish the-first proposition, and he is not entitled to relief until he has done-so. Dinsmore v. Mayor and Aldermen, 76 N. H. 187, 189. He is, however, entitled to know upon what ground the seat was denied him by the board, to the end that his rights may be preserved if the conclusions of the board were based upon an error of law. This-information should be obtained upon appropriate proceedings in the board of aldermen. In trying this election contest, the aider-men-sit as a court and are bound to comply with the request of interested parties to so far detail the grounds upon which their decision rests that it can be ascertained whether the conclusion reached is based upon reversible error. What action should be taken by the court, in the event of a refusal of the board to specify the grounds upon which they acted, is a question not now presented^ It is not to be assumed that they will fail to perform their judicial duty. On the contrary, it must be assumed that they will act-lawfully.

“Though not in the ordinary sense a court, the members of the-common council are required in controversies of this character to-judicially determine which contestant is entitled to the office. ‘ When so acting, they are not emancipated from the ordinary principles upon which justice is administered.’” Rollins v. Connor, 74 N. H. 456. The substance of the whole matter is that the board, constitutes a court whose decisions upon questions of fact are final,, but whose conclusions of law are subject to review. This being so, their procedure, like that of all courts, must be such as justice and convenience require. One of these requirements is that the proceedings and the record thereof should be in such form that the questions of law passed upon, and their materiality to the final, issue before the board, can be readily and accurately ascertained.. In those cases where there is no request for such detailed action and. extended record, there will ordinarily be nó occasion for it. A general verdict or order will suffice. But where there is a contest,, and the parties seasonably request rulings and findings upon specific-questions, it becomes the duty of the tribunal to take action accordingly.

“The plaintiff, on asking for a ruling which is correct in law and. *143 is applicable to the case to be tried, has a right to know whether in deciding that case against him the judge did or did not act under the rule of law stated in the ruling as,ked for.” Jaquith v. Davenport, 191 Mass. 415. “The purpose to be subserved by propositions of law is to determine whether the trial judge entertains correct views of the principle of law involved in the proceeding. In some instances it is only through the medium of such propositions that the record can be made to show the views of the court as to the principles of law applicable to the facts in the case.” Chicago etc. Co. v. Chicago, 202 Ill. 576. While the language above quoted was used in reference to the action of ordinary courts of law, yet it is applicable here. In each of these cases, as in the case at bar, the findings of the lower tribunal were conclusive on the facts, while its rulings on the law were subject to review.

Under the practice in this state, the inquiry upon

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 302, 77 N.H. 139, 1913 N.H. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broderick-v-hunt-nh-1913.