State v. Lane

18 A. 1035, 16 R.I. 620, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 A. 1035 (State v. Lane) 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
State v. Lane, 18 A. 1035, 16 R.I. 620, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 74 (R.I. 1889).

Opinions

Tillinghast, J.

This case was submitted to the court upon the following agreed statement of facts, namely :

“ It is agreed that the above entitled case may be heard and determined by the court upon the said information and answers filed therein, together with the following agreed statement of facts.”

Transcript of records of tbe Town Council of Cumberland, showing the election of School Committee of said town from the year 1883 to 1889 inclusive :

“ June, 1883.

“ Isaac H. Easterbrooks,

“ Edmund Clarke,

“ Robert Murray.

School Committee for three years.

“ June 12, 1884.

“ Horace A. Follett,

\ School Committee

“ Samuel E. Carpenter.

S for three years.

[621]*621“ June, 1885.

“ Myron Fish,

1 School Committee

“ Charles O. Flagg,

“ June 19, 1886.

“ For three years, School Committee, George E. Whipple; two years, Charles E. Howes; three years, Arlon M. Razee, Robert Murray.

“July 5, ’86.

“Salary 265.

“ June 18, 1887.

“ Thomas J. Smith,

) For three years

“ John D. Paterson,

j School Committee.

“ Salary 275.

“ June 14, 1888.

“School Committee for three years, Charles E. Howes, B. H. Lane, Thomas W. Hague.

“ For one year, in place of A. M. Razee, resigned, A. B. Gould. Salary 275.

“ July 2, 1888. (Town Council), voted to accept the resignation of Robert Murray as a member of the School Committee.

“Attest: John F. Clare, Council Clerk.

“At the annual meeting of the School Committee in June, 1888, there were present of the members thereof :

“ John D. Patterson, Benj. H. Lane, Charles E. Howes, Andrew B. Gould, Robert Murray.

“ Thos. W. Hague appeared at the following meeting and acted as a member of the committee. After this meeting Robert Murray resigned as a member, his term expiring in June, 1889.

“June 12, 1889. The town council .elected James A. Wilde, John J. Connally, Conrad W. Cook, school committee for three years.

“ John J. Connally declined, and Thomas Hughes was elected in his place.

“ At the annual meeting on June 24, 1889, of said school committee, there were present: John D. Patterson, Benjamin H. Lane, Chas. E. Howes, Thomas J. Smith, and Thomas W. Hague.

“ Conrad W. Cook and Thomas Hughes presented their certificates of election, having qualified to act as members of said com[622]*622mittee, and they were read and admitted by the chairman, and the reading of the certificate of James A. Wilde was refused.

“ George E. Whipple retired from the committee at the end of school year of 1887-1888, for the reason, as was stated by him, that his term of office expired at that time.”

The main question raised by the agreed statement of facts, including the pleadings, and the one which is decisive of the controversy, is this, viz.: Who composed the legally constituted school committee of the town of Cumberland on the first day of July, 1889, the time at which the defendant claims to have been elected superintendent of public schools of said town ? Seven members was the number allowed by law. The defendant’s answer to the information filed by the Attorney General alleges that the school committee at that time consisted of seven members, the limit allowed by law, to wit: John D. Paterson, Thos. W. Hague, Benjamin PI. Lane, Chas. E. Howes, Conrad W. Cook, Thomas J. Smith, and Thomas Hughes; that each member had been duly elected to his said office by the town council of said town, as appears of record, and that they had duly qualified to act in said capacity.

The Attorney General in his replication to the defendant’s answer denies that the school committee consisted at that time of John D. Paterson, Thos. W. Hague, Benjamin H. Lane, Chas. E. Howes, Conrad W. Cook, Thomas J. Smith, and Thomas Plughes, but on the contrary avers that said committee consisted of John D. Paterson, Benjamin PI. Lane, Chas. E. Howes, Conrad W. Cook, Thos. J. Smith, Thomas Hughes, and James A. Wilde.

The record of the doings of the town council above set forth is by no means clear or satisfactory, and we are therefore compelled to resort to inference to some extent in order to determine some of the facts necessary to a decision of the case. The first inference which we draw from the record is, that under the original division of said school committee into three classes by lot, as provided by Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 50, § 4, the term of office of three members thereof expired at the end of the third year from the time of said division; that the term of office of two members thereof expired at the end of two years therefrom; and that the [623]*623term of office of the remaining two members thereof expired at the end of one year therefrom. That hence it follows that, at the end of the first year after said division into classes, there were two vacancies to be filled for three years ; that at the end of the second year there were two vacancies to be filled for three years ; and that at the end of the third year there were three vacancies to be filled for three years ; and so on down to the present time ; the council electing three members every third year, and two members each year during the two intervening years, each member being elected, of course, for three years. This manner of proceeding would constantly insure a body of seven members, the council of course filling any vacancies that might from time to time occur by death, resignation, or otherwise.

Commencing, then, at the beginning of the record before us, we find that in June, 1883, three members were elected for three years. We assume that the committee was then full. In 1884 two members were elected for three years, and in 1885 two members were elected for three years. These three elections, taken in the order in which they occur, show that the original division of the committee into thi-ee classes, as provided by statute, resulted in the manner we have assumed. The record for 1886 is somewhat ambiguous, but after much study thereof we are quite clearly of the opinion that it shows that three members, viz., Geo. E. Whipple, Arlon M. Razee, and Robert Murray, were each elected for the term of three years; and that one member, viz., Charles E. Howes, was elected for two years. The last named member, we infer, must have been elected to fill a vacancy then existing, although the record is silent on this subject, for no member could legally have been elected for two years except to fill a vacancy. And furthermore that was the year for the election of three members, whereas four were in fact elected. By consulting the official report of the school committee of Cumberland, on file in the office of the Commissioner of Public Schools for the year 1886-87, it appears that Myron Fish, elected in 1885, did not act after the first year of his election, showing, we think, that Charles E. Howes was elected in 1886 to fill the vacancy caused by his withdrawal or'resignation.

In the year 1887 there were two vacancies by the expiration of [624]

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 1035, 16 R.I. 620, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-ri-1889.