Hoxsie v. Edwards

53 A. 128, 24 R.I. 338, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 26, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 A. 128 (Hoxsie v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoxsie v. Edwards, 53 A. 128, 24 R.I. 338, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 90 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

This is a petition in equity in the nature *340 of quo warranto under the statute, Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 263, and is brought for the purpose of determining whether the complainant or the respondent now lawfully holds and is entitled to hold the office of town clerk of the town of Exeter.

The petition sets out that at the regular annual election held in said town on the 3d day of June, 1902, seventy-four ballots were cast for the petitioner for the office of town clerk, and that no ballots were cast for any other person therefor ; that the town council of said town ther'eafterwards counted the ballots cast at said election, and declared the petitioner to be duly elected town clerk of said town, and that he has duly qualified for said office. It also sets out that John H. Edwards of said town, who was the town clerk thereof until the election and qualification of the petitioner, but now having no lawful title to said office, now holds and usurps the same to the exclusion of the petitioner, and holds possession of the town records, safes, town seal, and all the other appurtenances of said office, and refuses to surrender the same to thepetitioner.

He therefore prays that the respondent may be ousted from’ said office and be ordered and directed to surrender to the petitioner the possession of said records and appurtenances.

The answer of the respondent denies that any election was held in said town on the 3rd day of June, 1902. It also denies that the town council of said town has duly declared that the petitioner has been elected to said office, or that the respondent wrongfully usurps and holds said office; but on the other hand alleges that he, the respondent, now lawfully holds the same by virtue of his lawful election thereto on the 11th day of June, 1901, at the district meetings then lawfully held in said town, and that, in consequence of there having been no election of town officers for the year 1902 in said town, he now holds over as said town clerk, under Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 39, § 19.

He also sets up that the election held on the 3d day of June, 1902, was illegal and void for the following reasons, viz.: (1) because the places of holding the district meetings were not fixed upon by the electors of said districts agreeably *341 to the provisions of Pub. Laws K. I. cap. 808, §§ 8 and 9 ; (2) because said district meetings were not duly notified according to law by the town sergeant; (3) because, in consequence of the uncertainty as to the place of meeting in said voting districts, and of the defective character of said notices, the polls in voting district No. 1 were not opened, and, in consequence of a want of due notice of the time and places of holding said meetings, but a minority of the qualified electors of said district No. 2 were present where the polls were opened and a pretended election was held ; and (4) because, in consequence of said irregularities and unlawful proceedings, the qualified voters of said town did not have a full, fair, and legal opportunity to give expression to their choice for a town clerk on said 3rd day of June, 1902.

The answer further sets up that the number of voters in said town on the 3rd day of June, 1902, was about two hundred and fifty, of which number about one hundred and fifty-three reside and vote in voting district No. 2.

He therefore prays that said petition be dismissed.

The facts in the case, in so far as they are material to the question presented for our decision, are substantially as fol- ' lows :

In February, 1901, the town of Exeter was divided into two voting districts, Pub. Laws E. I. cap. 887; and there-afterwards the town council of said town duly designated the place in each of said voting districts for the holding of the first meeting thereof as required by section 2 of said chapter.

Said first meeting was held on the 11th day of June, 1901, which was the time fixed for the annual election of town officers in said town in that year. The secret ballot system has not been adopted by said town.

At the general election for State officers, members of the General Assembly, etc., held in November, 1901, the same polling places were used as had been designated as aforesaid, the electors in both of said districts having failed to take any action by way of designating the places for voting therein. And no action has been taken by said electors, up to the present time, by way of designating places for the holding of dis *342 trict meetings in'said town. On the 17th day of May, 1902, the town clerk of said town duly issued his warrant to the town sergeant, requiring him to warn the qualified electors of each of said voting districts to meet in district meetings at the places which had been designated by the town council as aforesaid, on the 3rd day of June, 1902, at nine o’clock, A. M., for the purpose of giving in their ballots for town clerk, town council, town treasurer, justices of the peace, one assessor of taxes for three years, one member of the school committee for three years, town sergeant and district officers, and a moderator to preside in all meetings of the town, and for the transaction of such other business as,might lawfully come before said meetings, by posting up two or more notifications thereof in public places in each of said districts at least seven days before said meeting.

Said 3rd day of June, 1902, fell on the first Tuesday of that month. And the evidence shows that from time immemorial, with the exception of the year 1901, the first Tuesday in June has been the election day for town officers in said town. So that it is to be presumed that that was the time fixed by law, or by some vote or by-law of the town, long ago, for the holding of the annual election in said town. Moreover, upon the republican ballots for town officers for the year 1901, used in both of said districts, the following printed statement appears, namely : “Election of Town Officers, First Tuesday in June annually.” Nothing relating to said time was put upon the democratic ballot or other ballots used at that election, and the ballots cast by the republicans outnumbered those which were cast by any other party.

(2) The time for the annual election in 1901, namely, June 11th, which fell on the second Tuesday in June of that year, was fixed by the town council by virtue of said section 2 of chapter 887, as aforesaid, that time having been so fixed because the annual town meeting for laying a tax and doing other town business outside of the election of town officers fell, as usual, on the first Monday of said month. And the town having then been divided into voting districts, the annual election could not be held in connection with the trans *343 acting of said business. Since the holding of said financial or business town meeting on said first Tuesday in June, 1901, the time for the holding of similar meetings has been changed so as not to fall upon the first Tuesday in June, thereby preventing any further interference with the holding of district meetings on the first Tuesday in June hereafter, as said town meetings have always heretofore been held, with the exception aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 128, 24 R.I. 338, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoxsie-v-edwards-ri-1902.