Newcomb v. Sholes

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 19, 2001
DocketWALcv-00-011
StatusUnpublished

This text of Newcomb v. Sholes (Newcomb v. Sholes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomb v. Sholes, (Me. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

WALDO, SS. Docket No. CV 00-011 ROGER NEWCOMB, ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) Vv ) FINDINGS OF FACT ) AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW ) STATE OF MAINE ) Waldo County Superior Cour DENNIS SHOLES, et al, ) UL 1a eat Defendant. ) JUL TQ oO REC'D AND FILED Joyce M. Page, Clerk

At all relevant times both the Plaintiff and the Defendant, Dennis Sholes! were residents of Swanville, a small town in Waldo Count of about 1300 people according to the unchallenged statement of the Defendants’ attorney. Each of the parties were public officers in the town during portions of the late 20th century. Dennis Sholes continued as an officer thereafter.

The Town of Swanville (hereinafter Town) is a municipality with a three person board of selectpersons who manage its affairs. Several positions, besides theirs, require election. Such offices are Town Clerk, Tax Clerk, Tax Collector, School Board member(s), Planning Board member(s) and Code Enforcement Officer. See Town Charter (Plaintiff’s Exhibit #1) Article 14, Part A, §4.04. Under §4.02 thereof the Selectpersons2 may appoint a Road Commissioner as well as other officers such as constables and the plumbing inspector.

1. Dennis Sholes will be treated as the sole defendant although he is also listed as a defendant because of his position, and the Inhabitants of the Town of Swanville (the Town) is also named as a party defendant.

2. They are called Selectmen in the Charter. The issue here arises from $1500.00 that was appropriated in 1999 for that fiscal year - 1999 and ultimately paid as additional compensation to Dennis Sholes. §2.06 prevents the Town from paying a selectperson unless there is a “competitive bid proposal.” The compensation to be paid to Selectpersons is supposed to be fixed at each annual town meeting. See §2.02(a).

Plaintiff’s Exhibit #3 is the Town Warrant for the March 14, 2000 Annual Town Meeting. It contained an appropriation for the selectpersons and for a Road Commissioner ($1542.00). A year earlier there had been an article approved allowing payment of $1500.00 for road services. It was a general appropriation on the Road Commissioner line in the warrant. In fact it was never intended to be for the purpose of hiring a road commissioner.

The selectpersons elected at the annual town meeting held their organizational meeting within 24 hours all in accordance with §2.03 of Article II. It is interesting to note that they were required to serve as Overseers of the Poor, Assessors of the Town, and Road Commissioner3 under the charter. The statute mandates, in default of election of a road commissioner or commissioners by the selectpersons, the selectpersons are to act as a “board of road commissioners” and, in Swanville, the Court finds, that occurred. See 30-A M.R.S.A. § 7(C). But see §7(A)(2).

Mr. Kelly relies on Howard v. Hayworth, 96 A. 769, 114 Me. 413 which adopted the “Doctrine of Incompatibility”. Mr. Hahn cites Barter v. City of Rockland, 96 A. 773, 114 Me. 166 (1916) and its distinction between de facto and jure appointments as controlling.

In this Court’s view the analysis of both counsel is overly technical.

3. Justice Mead noted the singular in his Order of June 7, 2001. Mr. Hahn made reference to the singular in his brief on page 8 and Mr. Kelly noted it in his motion for Summary Judgment on page 1, § 2. 3

The fact is that the $1500 in the 1999 warrant and $1542 in 20004 was part of an appropriation line in the warrant to the taxpayers of Swanville. As such it dealt with moneys to be spent. It did not thereby implicitly suggests that the Board had committed to hiring a “Road Commissioner” and it did not make Dennis Sholes the Road Commissioner. It simply fixed compensation for that type of service to be rendered to the Town.

The facts relating to the next year’s warrant and the debate thereon make clear that the propriety of the appropriation was in question. But that does not make the 1999 action wrong. It again brought the matter before the town meeting for public consideration.

The vote as reported is confusing to say the least. The report states that the “motion was made to move the question duly seconded and so voted to accept the article as written. zero for yes and all votes for no, to delete the money for Rd. Com and for CEO.”5

From the foregoing it would seem that there was a vote on the motion to close debate so as to vote on an amendment which must have been made to delete from the article the money for the Road Commissioner and the Code Enforcement Officer. The motion to close debate must have passed by the required 2/3 majority. Then, it appears, the motion to amend the article so as to delete the money for the Road Commissioner and the Code Enforcement Officer failed. That left the article as it appeared in the warrant which was, assumably, properly before the meeting by

4. Plaintiff's Exhibit #3 is a copy of the Warrant while Plaintiff’s Exhibit #4 is a copy of the Minutes of the meeting. It seems it follows the warrant and Article 3 says “To see what compensation the Town will vote... . “

5. The vote is surprising in that the movant who sought deletion voted with the majority. It may have been that the movant wanted to seek legal advice, yielded to the majority and “waited for next year.” By then litigation had begun. The complaint date and the filing date was the same as the date of the Town Meeting though the action date on the article in question was a week later - March 14th. That is why, on March 14 2000, Mr. Sholes suggested to the Town that no money be appropriated on the “Road Commissioner” line. None was. 4

motion. Finally, it would appear, the article “as written,” that is as it appeared in the warrant was affirmed by a proper vote. This Court finds that all of the foregoing is inferred as a matter of fact from the exhibits and the testimony, and finds that it is what happened.

A return to Howard, supra, and its “Doctrine of Incompatibility” requires little by way of analysis. The Maine Legislature has made it clear that there is no incompatibility between a Road Commissioner and a Selectperson. Since Maine’s inception, see Chapter CXVII Laws of Maine, 1820 “. . . any town shall elect Selectmen surveyors of highways,” Selectpersons have been responsible for town roads and are still able to act as road commissioners unless they, or the Town, elect a different course. See 30-A M.R.S.A. § 2526(7). See also P.L. 1954, C. 91, § 20: “Selectmen may act as road commissioners”. While Howard, supra, deals with incompatible offices, the relation between Selectpersons and Road Commissioners is better shown by State v. McLellan 117 Me. 73, 102 A. 778 (1918) and by the statute itself. McLellan, Id. also stands as authority that this action has no basis in law since the money was paid in accordance with Treasurer’s Warrants which were unchallenged.

In this Court’s view, nothing has been shown to suggest that a Selectperson cannot be properly compensated when providing the services a “Road Commissioner” does. That is especially true if the selectpersons act as a board of road commissioners or use the Charter to provide that one of them does the tasks. There is little difference in further compensation for that and the difference in compensation for Chair of the Board.

Moreover, the statute provides a remedy for persons like the plaintiff. He can seek to have the Town divide the offices under §2526(7)(A). Assuming such an election, there is a distinction in the offices to which the law applies. See State v. McLellan, Id. Failing in that the Town may arrange for compensation of its designated selectperson in any way which is not deceitful.

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Related

Flye v. First Congregational Parish
95 A. 783 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1915)
R. J. Caldwell Co. v. Cushnoc Paper Co.
96 A. 730 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1916)
Howard v. Harrington
96 A. 769 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1916)
Barter v. Mayor of Rockland
96 A. 773 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1916)
State v. McLellan
102 A. 778 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Newcomb v. Sholes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomb-v-sholes-mesuperct-2001.