State v. Richmond

26 N.H. 232
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 N.H. 232 (State v. Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
State v. Richmond, 26 N.H. 232 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

Bell, J.

This application is founded upon the dicta of the judges, who delivered the opinion of the court in Pritch[235]*235ard v. Atkinson, 3 N. H. Rep. 335; Dudley v. Cilley, 5 N. H. Rep. 561; and Robbins v. Bridgewater, 6 N. H. Rep. 524; where it is said that if selectmen proceed otherwise than according to law in laying out highways, all their proceedings are void, and their validity may be called in question collaterally, and no certiorari lies to quash their proceedings, because, as is suggested, their proceedings are not judicial.

We find it difficult to conceive that the character of proceedings as judicial or otherwise, can depend upon the office or.station of those who take part in them. If a power is judicial when it is exercised by one set of men, it can hardly have a different character when similarly exerted by others. Whenever one or more persons are authorized or required to call parties before them, to hear their allegations and their proofs, and to pronounce a determination between them, to make a decision by which the rights of parties are to be bound, that power seems to us to be judicial, and their proceedings are judicial. Such seems to us to be the power exercised, under our statutes, by the selectmen of towns in laying out highways.

Wherever any judicial power is exercised by any persons by virtue of law, in a cause unknown to the common law, no writ of error lies; and the only remedy to set aside or reverse the proceedings is the writ of certiorari. Huse v. Grimes, 2 N. H. Rep. 210.

The general superintendence vested by the law in the superior court over all courts of inferior jurisdiction, for the prevention and correction of errors and abuses, where the laws have not provided a remedy, (Rev. Stat. ch. 18Í, § 7,) can be exercised only by means of the writ of certiorari ; and we can -hardly deem it necessary or proper for a court of corrective jurisdiction to declare in advance that a writ of certiorari does not -lie in a class of cases, which may strongly call for such a remedy, and where it may seem to others that it was the only appropriate remedy. The dicta referred to have [236]*236not the authority of decisions, because this point was not then before the court. The decisions in Maine and Massachusetts, which were cited by the court, have no force here, because the powers of selectmen in those States, in relation to laying out highways, are essentially different from those of like officers here. There the power to establish roads is vested in the town upon the report of the selectmen, while here the entire power to lay out and establish is vested in the selectmen.

The cases of Parks v. Mayor, &c. of Boston, 8 Pick. 218; Hancock v. City of Boston, 1 Met. 122; and Stone v. City of Boston, 2 Met. 220, are authorities directly to the point, that a certiorari does lie to correct the errors of tribunals possessing the precise powers of our boards of selectmen on this subject, and of course to the point that the power in question is judicial. It is not, however, necessary to pursue this inquiry further in the present case. But it ought not to escape our attention that the redress which may be obtained in cases of highways improperly and illegally laid out, by treating the proceedings as nullities, when they are brought in question collaterally, must often be more dilatory and imperfect than the remedy by certiorari.

Though it is true that where a certiorari does not lie to reverse or set aside a proceeding, because it is not of a judicial character, such proceeding may be impeached by proof, when collaterally brought in question; yet this is equally true of the proceedings of inferior tribunals of special and limited powers, though they may be beyond dispute of a judicial character, and liable to be reversed on a certiorari, if such tribunal has acted in a case or against a person, or by a process or mode of proceeding beyond its jurisdiction, and not warranted by law. The principle is general that wherever any persons assume to act under a special and limited power conferred by law, their doings may be avoided by showing that they had no jurisdiction, or that they have exceeded the limits of their authority. Russel v. Perry, 14 [237]*237N. H. Rep. 152; Sanborn v. Fellows, 2 Foster’s Rep. 473; Morse v. Presby, 5 Foster’s Rep. 299; 2 Cow. & Hill’s Phill. Ev. 179, (3d ed.); Robbins v. Bridgewater, and cases there cited. So that as to the point that the proceedings of selectmen, in these cases, may be collaterally impeached, it makes little difference whether a certiorari does or does not lie to reverse their proceedings. Indeed, it may be regarded as settled, that though a party has a right to treat the proceedings of an inferior tribunal as nullities in a collateral proceeding, he may, nevertheless, maintain a certiorari to set them aside. Starr v. Trustees of Rochester, 6 Wend. 564; Striker v. Mott, 6 Wend. 465.

Though it is said, in the cases relied on by the defendants, that if selectmen proceed otherwise than according to law in laying out highways,' all their proceedings are void; yet it by no means follows, we think, that in the broadest sense of the term void, those proceedings are mere nullities. There is in our books great looseness and no little confusion in the use of the terms void and voidable, growing, perhaps, in some degree, out of the imperfection of our language. There are at least four kinds of defects which are included under these expressions, while we have but those two terms to express them all. 2 Kent’s Com. 234; 7 Bac. Ab. 64, Void and Voidable; 22 Vin. Ab. 12, Void and Voidable; Jacob’s Law Diet. Void.

I. Proceedings may be wholly void, without force or effect as to all persons and for all purposes, and incapable of being or being made otherwise. This is the broadest sense of the word, but the cases which fall within this signification are probably not numerous.

II. Things may be void as to some persons and for some purposes, and, as to them, incapable of being otherwise, which are yet valid as to other persons, and effectual for other purposes. As a deed, 'executed by an idiot, and by others capable of contracting, may be void as to the idiot, and yet binding as to the others. An instrument in form of [238]*238a deed, but without a seal, may be void as a conveyance, and yet be binding for some other purposes.

III. Things may be void as to all persons and for all purposes, or as to some persons and for some purposes, thoughnotsoastoothers,untiltheyareconfirmed; butthough said to be void, they are not so in the broadest sense of that term, because they have a capacity of being confirmed, and after such confirmation they are binding. For this kind of defect our language affords no distinctive term. They are strictly neither void, that is, mere nullities, nor voidable, because they do not require to be avoided, but until confirmed they are without validity. They are usually spoken of as void, and as usage is the only law of language, they are so called correctly. It is, therefore, always to be considered an open question, to be decided by the connexion and otherwise, whether the term void is used in a given instance in one or the other of thfese in some respects dissimilar senses.

IV. Contracts and proceedings are properly called

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.H. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-richmond-nhsuperct-1853.