State ex rel. Central Railroad v. Supervisors of Town of Lime

23 Minn. 521
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 17, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 Minn. 521 (State ex rel. Central Railroad v. Supervisors of Town of Lime) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Central Railroad v. Supervisors of Town of Lime, 23 Minn. 521 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Cornell, J.1

By Sp. Laws 1869, c. 46, the town of Lime, in the county of Blue Earth, ivas authorized, by vote of a majority of its legal voters present and voting at any [523]*523annual, or regularly called special, town meeting, to issue its bonds to aid in the construction of any railroad running into, or proposed to be built through, said county, to fix the amount and size of the bonds to be issued, the terms and conditions upon which, and the person or corporation to whom, they should be issued, and to direct and empower its supervisors to carry such its vote into effect. Under this statute a special town meeting was called and held in conformity, as is claimed by the relator, with the provisions of the General Statutes relating to special town meetings, (Gen. St. c. 10, §§ 16, 17, et seq.,) in which the electors of the town generally participated, and at which a resolution was adopted by the requisite majority, pursuant to the notice given of the meeting, which, in terms, authorized and directed the supervisors of said town, and their successors in office, to issue and deliver to the relator a certain amount, of bonds, etc.,-upon certain terms and conditions, as therein named. As appears from the record of its proceedings, the meeting was regularly organized and conducted, the result declared, and proper entries made in its minutes. The relator, having, as it claims, fully complied Avith the terms and conditions named in the resolution entitling it to a portion of such bonds, uoav asks the supervisors to issue and deliver them accordingly, Avhich the latter refuse to do-upon several grounds, the sufficiency of'which this court isnoAV called upon to consider and determine. .

It is contended, first, that the Avritten statement filed Avith the toAAm clerk, upon Avhich the election Avas called, though purporting, on its face, to be regular, and to be signed by the requisite number of freeholders of the town, did not, in fact, contain such number, because some of the-persons signing the same Avere not, at the time, legally such freeholders; and, secondly, that the clerk only posted notices of the election in three, instead of five, public places inthetoAvn; and to support these positions, the alleged facts are sought to' be established by proof dehors the; [524]*524minutes kept by the clerk, and authenticated and filed as '.required by Gen. St. c. 10, §§ 19, 23.

Section 16 provides that “ special town meetings may be held for -the purpose of electing town officers to fill any ’vacancies that occur, also for the purpose of transacting any ‘other lawful business, whenever the supervisors, town clerk, •and justices of the peace, or any tivo of them, together with at least'twelve other freeholders of the town, file in the office of the town clerk a written statement that a special meeting- is necessary to the interests of the town.” Section 17 makes it the duty of “the town clerk with -whom such ’Statement is filed, as required in the preceding section, to record the same, and immediately cause notice to be posted up in five of the most public places in the town, giving at least ten days’ noticeof such special meeting.” Section 18 prescribes the character of the notice, and the succeeding ■sections relate to the mode and manner in which the meeting shall be organized, and its proceedings conducted, etc.

It will be observed that these special town meetings may be called and held for the purpose of electing any town ■officers to fill vacancies, and to transact any other lawful business ; and the 'question arises whether, after a meeting lias been held under-a sufficient notice, properly specifying the business to be done, and a decision upon the subject-matter submitted has been reached, and the result declared, •and made a matter of record, any officer of the town upon whom the duty is imposed of doing some specific act, in execution or in -.consequence of such decision, can legally refuse so to -act, on the ground of an erroneous decision of 'the town clerk in determining upon the freehold qualifications of any of the signers to the written statement filed in his office, and upon which he acted in making the call— ■especially when, as in this case, the statement shows upon its face that each signer avers himself to be a freeholder of ■the town, and nothing appears to the contrary.

Suppose such meeting had been called and held to fill a [525]*525vacancy in the office of town treasurer, and, as the result,. A was duly declared elected, and a proper record made of the fact, could the town clerk excuse himself for not performing the duty imposed by section 32, in regard to giving notice of such election to the person so declared elected,, on the ground that he had erred in his decision upon the character of the written statement, and in calling the meeting? Or could the supervisors, for the same reason, decline to act upon the official bond of such treasurer elect, as required by sections 38 and 39 of the same chapter? Such a position, in our judgment, would be clearly untenable 5 and it makes no difference that the subject-matter of the election relates to an issue of bonds, instead of the election of an officer, as the rule must be the same in both cases.

The power to call a special town meeting is vested, by the statute, solely with the town clerk. Upon that officer the duty is imposed of making a call whenever the requisite written statement provided by section 16 is filed in his office. Whether it is such a statement as is therein provided, is a matter alone for him to determine, in the honest exorcise of his best judgment upon the information before him, and such as may lawfully be presumed to be within his reach and possession. The statute, doubtless, selected him as the most fit person to be entrusted with the exercise of this power, because his official relations with the town and its citizens are necessarily such-as would likely well qualify him for an intelligent and impartial discharge of the duty imposed. When, therefore, as in the case at bar, the statement so filed is genuine, and correct in form, and there is some evidence, presumably at least, before the officer, calling for the exercise of his judgment, and nothing appears to affect the integrity of his conduct or the honesty of his decision, his determination in the matter is final and conclusive, except upon a review by some competent tribunal, in a direct proceeding authorized by law. Especially must this be the case as against town officers occupying the [526]*526position of the respondents herein, after the electors have acted upon the call and notice without question.. Com’rs of Knox Co. v. Aspinwall, 21 How. 539 ; Bissell v. City of Jeffersonville, 24 How. 287; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Evansville, 15 Ind 395 ; Martin v. Mott, 12 Wheaton, 19 ; Philadelphia & Trenton R. Co. v. Stimpson, 14 Peters, 448. Whether any provision exists, under our laws, for a review in a case of this kind need not be considered, as the question is not now before us.

In reference to the second point, as it is not clearly and affirmatively shown whether the notices of election -wore posted in three or five places, it must be presumed that the}’■were properly posted in accordance with the general presumption in favor of the right performance of official duty, though it be conceded that the alleged omission is not one covered by the decision in the case of Taylor v. Taylor, 10 Minn. 107.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Minn. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-central-railroad-v-supervisors-of-town-of-lime-minn-1877.