Cocheco Manufacturing Co. v. Strafford

51 N.H. 455
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 N.H. 455 (Cocheco Manufacturing Co. v. Strafford) 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
Cocheco Manufacturing Co. v. Strafford, 51 N.H. 455 (N.H. 1871).

Opinion

Bellows, C. J. *

The first question is, whether the parties have a right of trial by jury. By article twenty of our bill of rights, it is provided that in all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between two or more persons, except in cases in which it has heretofore otherwise been practised, the parties have a right to trial by jury. As to the first part of the provision, we have no doubt that under our decisions this proceeding must be regarded as a controversy concerning property within the meaning of this constitutional provision. Petition of the Mount Washington Road Co., 35 N. H. 142.

The inquiry then is, whether matters of this sort, at the adoption of' the constitution, were determined without a trial by jury; and to answer that question, it is necessary to consider our early legislation on .the [458]*458subject, as well as the nature of the power conferred upon the courts. The earliest authority for the abatement of taxes tliat we find was in 1719. Province Laws 1771, p. 138. By sec. 6 of that act, selectmen were authorized to assess taxes in their respective towns for such sums of money as may be voted therein, for the support of the ministry, schools, and the poor, and. for other necessary town charges, and to issue their warrants to the constables, who may m§ke distress, <fcc., and for want of goods, &c., to seize and imprison the person of the delinquent tax-payer; “ and if any person shall think himself overrated, and make it so appear to the selectmen, he shall be eased ; and if they refuse, such person aggrieved may make his application to the quarter sessions, who are hereby empowered to rectify the ’same.” The court of sessions had been previously constituted. See Province Laws 1771, p. 5, sec. 2. By that law the court of sessions was to be held quarterly at Portsmouth by justices of the peace, or so many as should be limited by their commissions to make a quorum, and it was to have cognizance of all matters and things proper to the jurisdiction of said court relating to the conservation of the peace, and the punishment of offenders according to the law and statutes in force within this province. By the same act jurisdiction was conferred upon justices of the peace to the amount of forty shillings. A court of common pleas was also established with a jurisdiction extending to twenty pounds, and a superior court with general jurisdiction in matters exceeding twenty pounds.

By the act of March 19,1771, same Province Laws, p. 207, these courts are reestablished with the same jurisdiction in general, and giving to the court of sessions the power to require money to be raised by taxation for sundry county purposes; to audit and allow accounts against the county, and generally to have charge of the county buildings and other property. By law of February 8, 1791, N. H. Laws, ed. 1805, p. 215, selectmen were authorized to abate taxes assessed by themselves or by their predecessors, if sufficient reason is shown; and if they refuse, the court of sessions, on application, may make such order as justice may require, but limiting it to cases of over valuation. The law of July 7,1827, ed. Laws of 1830, p. 559, sec. 14, is substantially like that of February, 1791, except that the court of common pleas takes .the place of the court of sessions, and it has the power to abate taxes assessed by way of doomage, for not giving an invoice when the person was unable to give it. By chapter 44 of the Revised Statutes, section 1, selectmen may, for good cause shown, abate any tax assessed by them ■or tlieir predecessors; and by section 2, if selectmen refuse, the couil of common pleas, ron application, may make such order as justice may require. The General Statutes, ch. 58, secs. 10 and 11, are the same.

From this review of our legislation, it will be observed that no provision is anywhere made for a trial by jury; and this affords an inference .that no such trial was contemplated, especially when it is con-sideren that for a great many years there was no constitutional provision from which it could be urged that such a trial was a matter of right.

.Upon the absence of any provision for a trial by jury in the assess-[459]*459snent of damages for lands taken for highways, much stress was laid by the court in Backus v. Lebanon, 11 N. H. 19, and in the Petition of Mount Washington Road Co., 35 N. H. 134, and especially in the latter case.

In all these provisions the selectmen have power to abate taxes assessed by themselves or their predecessors for any good cause, and, among others, for inability to pay them—Briggs's Petition, 29 N. H. 547; and, of course, up trial by jury before this could have been contemplated. So, too, there is nothing in the character of the jurisdiction originally given to the court of sessions that would encourage the belief that a trial by jury before that court was contemplated. It was to have cognizance of all matters and things proper to the jurisdiction of that court relating to the conservation of the peace and the punishment of offences; and such seems to have been the jurisdiction of that court in England. 5 Burns’s Justice 194. It seems, indeed, that indictments were then found by a grand jury, and trials had by a traverse jury, even in cases of felony, but it does not appear that it had jurisdiction of civil causes according to the course of the common law. So it appears to have been in the early history of our province, at the time the power to abate taxes was conferred upon it. Looking, then, at the nature of the power to be exercised, involving necessarily much exercise of discretion, and the tribunals to which it was entrusted, we should not be prepared to expect that the questions would be submitted to a jury. Nor are we able to learn of any instance of a trial by jury in such cases. Applications to the courts have not been numerous, and the reported cases are very few — only about half a dozen: in none of these, however, was there a trial by jury, — the facts having been determined by the court.

As the law now stands, the court has substantially the same power as the selectmen, and may abate taxes in whole or in part for inability in the tax-payer, — as in Briggs's Petition, 29 N. H. 547,—or on account of insanity. In some cases the court may make an equitable abatement, as in Perry's Petition, 16 N. H. 44; and generally the court may exercise the same discretion as the selectmen. Altogether, a large discretion is now lodged in the court, and so large as to be inconsistent with the idea of submitting the entire subject to a jury. Cases may however arise where it would be a proper exercise of discretion to send an issue to the jury, and we think the court would have power to do it,— as was held in Baker v. Holderness, 26 N. H. 110, in respect to a petition for an increase of damages to land, assessed by selectmen in laying- out a highway. There is nothing in the law that prohibits the submitting of questions arising in such cases to a jury; and, under the general power incident to courts of justice, we think they might do it when the nature of the case made it expedient.

In the case before us, the great question of fact is the value of the property taxed, consisting mainly of a water power; and, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, we think it would not be a sound exercise of discretion to send the question to a jury. In determining [460]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.H. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cocheco-manufacturing-co-v-strafford-nh-1871.