McDonnell v. Town of Derry

350 A.2d 620, 116 N.H. 3, 1976 N.H. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 21, 1976
DocketNo. 7301
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 350 A.2d 620 (McDonnell v. Town of Derry) 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
McDonnell v. Town of Derry, 350 A.2d 620, 116 N.H. 3, 1976 N.H. LEXIS 247 (N.H. 1976).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

The plaintiffs as taxpayers and voters, in the town of Derry, seek declaratory and injunctive relief against the town (RSA 491:22) and its selectmen as the result of certain votes taken at the 1975 annual town meeting. All questions of law raised by the petition were reserved and transferred without ruling by Douglas, J., upon an agreed statement of facts.

Prior to the 1975 Derry annual town meeting which was subject to RSA 39:2-a (Supp. 1975), the plaintiffs seasonably presented to the selectmen a petition to insert in the warrant (RSA 39:3 (Supp. 1975)) the following articles: (Article 10) “Do you favor a ceiling of $15,000 per annum on each and every town official’s salary?”; (Article 12) “To see if the Town Meeting will vote to require that all [4]*4Derry Town Departments, Officers and Commissions shall operate within limits of line item budgets, precisely as voted at the appropriate town or public meetings; and, further, that there shall be no deviation from these line item budgets, except for good cause, and only after approval by the Town Budget Committee, following an advertised public hearing, or take any other action thereon.”

Each of the aforementioned articles was placed on the “official ballot” for consideration by the voters on March 4, 1975. See RSA 39:2-a (Supp. 1975). The vote in favor of Article 10 was YES, 1,494; NO, 1,369. The vote in favor of Article 12 was YES, 2,380; NO, 579.

Thereafter, on March 15, 1975, at the second session of the town meeting, the so-called “deliberative” session, Article 20 was adopted. This article read as follows:

“To vote to raise and appropriate such sums of money as may be necessary for the maintenance of the poor, for laying out and repairing highways, including Town Road Aid Plan apportionment A and Town Road Aid Plan apportionment B, for building and repairing bridges, for police department, for the Derry District Court, for hydrant service and electric lights, for salaries of Town officials, for the Board of Health, for the expense of Town buildings, for support of the libraries, for State and County taxes, for aid to the Derry Visiting Nurses Association, for the Greater Salem Mental Health Clinic, for regional associations, for the Federal governments in the control of insect pests, for ambulance service, and for all necessary charges arising in said Town, and pass any vote relating thereto.”

Pursuant to Article 20 the deliberative meeting voted a line item budget, with provisions governing the salaries of certain town officers and employees. The salaries of the town manager, the town engineer, the recreation director, and the road agent were specifically included in the “budget details” considered at the meeting. Each of these salaries was in excess of $15,000. The salaries of the chief of police and the “waste water superintendent” were likewise in excess of $15,000 although not stated as separate items in the budget and not determinable by reference to the annual report.

The annual report for the year ending December 31, 1974 was available to residents on or about February 25, 1975, seven days [5]*5prior to the first session of the town meeting. It included the warrant for the 1975 town meeting, and the 1975 budget and “budget details”, an item-by-item breakdown of anticipated expenditures for the year. The warrant contained a preamble indicating that the 1975 town meeting would be held in two sessions in accordance with RSA 39:2-a (Supp. 1975), the first session for voting on the “official ballot”, and the second session for consideration of all other business.

By order of the selectmen dated March 17, 1975, the salaries of the town officials are being paid in accordance with the schedule adopted at the March 20 deliberative session. Following that order, the plaintiffs brought this action.

RSA 39:2-a (Supp. 1975) authorizes a bifurcated town meeting, the ostensible purpose of which is to provide for the election of town officials by ballot and similar voting upon other questions “required to be inserted upon said official ballot” in advance of the deliberative town meeting. The selectmen are authorized to choose another day for the second session, “for the transaction of all other-town business.” The statute specifically provides that “no business other than the election of town officers elected by an official ballot and other action required to be inserted on said official ballot shall be taken up at the first session” of the town meeting. Thus, unless the subject matter of any article is required by law to appear on the official ballot consideration of that subject, is to be reserved for the deliberative session. The parties to this action disagree as to the application of the statutes to the action taken at the Derry town meeting.

The dispute centers around the provision in the statute which prohibits the first session of the town meeting from considering matters not “required to be inserted” on the official ballot. Comments from the senate floor preceding passage of the bill which became RSA 39:2-a (Supp 1975) indicate that this provision refers specifically to those matters which are committed by statute to the official ballot. See Comments of Senator Jacobson, N.H.S.Jour. 317 (1969). See also RSA 31:17-a, 31:63-c'(Supp. 1975), 37:15, :17, 40-A:2, 60:38 (Supp. 1975), 72:44 (Supp. 1975), 156-A:l-a (Supp. 1975). It is not claimed that the fiscal matters to which Articles 10 and 12 relate are required by statute to be placed on the official ballot. The plaintiffs point out that other articles contained in the 1975 Derry official ballot were not specifically required by statute to be included therein. Nevertheless, they argue that if the selectmen place an item on the official ballot it is a proper subject for [6]*6consideration although not required to be thus submitted.

This argument overlooks the principle that ,a town meeting, capable of acting freely within its legal orbit, may validly reconsider a matter upon which it has already acted. See Frost v. Hoar, 85 N.H. 442, 160 A. 51 (1932); 4 E. McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 13.48, at 566 (1968). What is more, the town meeting may accomplish this without a formal motion to reconsider. See Hill v. Goodwin, 56 N.H. 441, 448 (1876); Frost v. Hoar, 85 N.H. 442, 160 A. 51 (1932); Lamb v. Danville School Board, 102 N.H. 569, 571, 162 A.2d 614, 616 (1960); Bullard v. Allen, 124 Me. 251, 127 A. 722 (1925); E. McQuillin supra.

The agreed statement of facts indicates that on at least two occasions following the March 4 ballot vote the Derry News ran articles indicating that the salary limit contained in Article 10 might come up for reconsideration at the later session. See Byron v. Timberlane Regional School Dist., 113 N.H. 449, 456, 309 A.2d 218, 222 (1973). The minutes of the deliberative session of the town meeting show that the voters were aware of the conflict between Article 10 and some items contained in the budget since open discussion of the possible conflict occupied a good part of the meeting on March 15. Against this background, a majority of the voters present on March 15 voted to authorize salaries in excess of $15,000.

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Bluebook (online)
350 A.2d 620, 116 N.H. 3, 1976 N.H. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonnell-v-town-of-derry-nh-1976.