Governor & Council v. Morey

97 A. 375, 78 N.H. 125, 1916 N.H. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 7, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 A. 375 (Governor & Council v. Morey) 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
Governor & Council v. Morey, 97 A. 375, 78 N.H. 125, 1916 N.H. LEXIS 12 (N.H. 1916).

Opinion

Peaslee, J.

The petitioners assume that the proceedings taken under the former application are defective, so that there is occasion for further action, in order that the state’s rights and obligations may be fully determined.

The jurisdiction of the court to now take any action whatever in the matter has been brought in question. It is argued that the appointment of the commission was a purely ministerial act, and that therefore the appointment of one commission exhausted all the power conferred upon the court by the special statute. Laws 1911, c. 130. It is not probable that the legislature intended to so limit the power of appointment. If, after the first commissioners had been designated, they had died, or become disqualified, or had declined to act, there would have been power to name a new commission. And so if it should prove that the proceedings of the commission were so irregular or defective that no final judgment or decree could be entered, a like power would exist. The legislature intended to confer upon the court a power of appointment that would result in a final and binding adjudication of the matter in controversy.

Whether the regularity of the proceedings before the commissioners would be more appropriately considered upon a transfer of the case from the superior court, after a hearing upon an appeal from the commissioners, need not now be determined. The present petition is based upon the theory that there may be rights of parties which are in no way affected by the earlier proceedings, including the appeals. The question presented is whether there are rights wholly outside the cases now pending in the superior court. If it is true that there are such rights, it follows that they cannot be adjudicated in any future steps in those proceedings.

One question to be considered is whether there has been a failure to give the notice required by the special act. If there has been, other questions may become material. If there has not been such failure, there is no occasion for further proceedings here. The answer to this question involves a consideration of what the process is by which those claiming interests in these lands are made parties to the condemnation proceedings, so as to be bound by the judgments finally rendered therein. On one hand it is claimed that the notice issued by this court upon the application of the state for the *128 appointment of commissioners is such process, and upon the other that it is the notice given by the commissioners.

The question whether due process of law requires notice of the application to appoint commissioners, has been argued. Upon this, the authorities are somewhat conflicting. The question usually arises upon the interpretation of a particular statute, it frequently involves matters of local practice, and much that has been said has no general application. In some jurisdictions it is held that the appointment of such a commission is a purely ministerial act and that no notice is necessary. In other states the view is taken that the proceeding partakes more of the nature of drawing a jury for a specific case, that preliminary questions may be raised and considered, and that notice is essential.

If it be assumed that the former view is correct, and that notice preceding the appointment is not essential to the protection of constitutional rights, the question here in issue is still undecided. Did the legislature intend that such notice should be given? Because the act contains no express provision upon the subject, it is argued that no notice is required. But the inquiry is not to be limited to a mere literal interpretation of the words used. If this were done, no commission could have been appointed at all. The act nowhere in terms confers upon the court .power to appoint, nor does it say that the commission shall be so appointed. It merely provides that the state, acting through the governor and council, may apply for such appointment, and then goes on to prescribe the powers and duties of the commission. From this it is at once inferred that the commissioners are to be appointed by the court, and a part of that inference is that the proceeding is to be conducted according to the accepted practice in this jurisdiction.

“The court shall order notice to be given, in such manner as they think fit, of any petition, complaint, libel, application, or motion in writing filed therein, and no judgment or decree shall be rendered thereon without compliance with such order.” P. S., c. 222, s. 13. With this provision in the general law, there was no occasion for the legislature to declare in the special act that notice of the application should be given. It was covered by the existing statute.

The statute being a general provision as to applications to the court, the legislature would naturally understand that it governed the procedure upon applications thereafter authorized, as to which no special rule of procedure was prescribed. Petition of M. & M. R. R., 68 N. H. 570, 571.

*129 The special act does not provide that a commission shall be appointed without notice. It does not even expressly provide for the appointment and remain silent upon the subject of notice. Everything is left to be carried out in accordance with the methods provided by the general statutory enactments upon the subject, or in accordance with the accepted practice. The act did not undertake to lay down details of procedure. For example, the appeal provision is entirely silent upon the subject of notice. But it cannot be doubted that the legislature understood that notice of appeals would be given.

If it be true that, upon the application of one party, the court could constitutionally make a selection of commissioners without notice to the adverse party, it is also true that no such procedure has been commonly followed in this state. The usual, if not the uniform practice has been to give notice in all such cases. It is not to be presumed that the legislature intended to disregard this just and reasonable method of procedure. The presumption is rather that it was understood that such procedure would be adopted, and that it was not so stated in the act because of the understanding that it was already sufficiently provided for.

It is argued that the power of appointment here conferred is like that to appoint the tax commission. Laws 1911, c. 169, s. 2. But the distinction is obvious. That power relates to the creation of a body having certain jurisdiction as to controversies which might arise in the future. No particular litigation and no specified parties are involved. The sole moving cause for the appointment is the legislative mandate. Here the situation is very different. The appointees are to try a specified piece of litigation. Its boundaries are well defined. The court has no power to act until moved by a party to that litigation, whose interests are adverse to those of other necessary parties. In appointing a tax commission the court acts without petition or application of any kind. It is not an adversary proceeding. The reasons which make notice advisable, if not constitutionally necessary, in the present case do not exist in that one. The situations are not analogous, and one does not furnish a precedent to be followed in the other.

Decisions touching the rights of landowners in highway appeals (Carpenter’s Petition, 67 N. H. 574, and cases cited) have no application here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A. 375, 78 N.H. 125, 1916 N.H. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/governor-council-v-morey-nh-1916.