Webster

1 Rep. Cont. El. 526
CourtMassachusetts House of Representatives
DecidedJuly 1, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Rep. Cont. El. 526 (Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts House of Representatives primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster, 1 Rep. Cont. El. 526 (Mass. Super. Ct. 1844).

Opinion

The election of Solomon Robinson, returned as a member from the town of Webster, was controverted by Jonathan Day and others, on the ground, that the selectmen permitted three persons to vote at the election, who had no right to vote, and who voted for said Robinson; and would not suffer three persons to vote, who, if they had been allowed to vote, would have voted against said Robinson; and that if such persons voting had not been allowed to do so, and such persons as were not allowed to vote had been allowed, the said Robinson would not have been elected.

The three persons alleged to have voted illegally were Jotham Eddy, Oliver W. Adams and Elijah Pratt.

The three persons, whose votes were alleged to have been illegally rejected, were Harvey Wood, Alvan Child and Bradford Marcy.

Jotham Eddy gave in evidence, that on the loth day of May, 1843, he removed from Dudley to Webster, and voted for Mr. liobinson as representative, on the 13th of November, 1843,
Oliver W. Adams testified, that he removed from Southbridge to Webster, on the 15th day of May, 1843, and voted for Robinson as representative, on the 13th day of November last, at Webster.
Elijah Pratt deposed as follows : 4 I came from Dudley to Webster to work, in October, 1842. I boarded during the week in the village, and returned home and spent the Sabbath with my family in Dudley and at church in Webster. I always intended to remove my family to Webster as soon as I could get a desirable tenement, but was prevented by sickness and other causes. In August or September, 1843, I purchased a house in Webster, and removed my family from Dudley to Webster on the 2d day of October, 1843; I am now in the employ of Messrs. Slaters, and have been ever since October, 1842. I voted for Solomon Robinson as representative from Webster, on the 13th day of November, 1843.’
Harvey Wood testified, that on the 13th of November, 1843, he voted in Webster for governor, lieutenant-governor and senators, and retired to the opposite side of the hall, where he was informed that they were voting for a representative to the general court at the same time ; he then repaired to the desk of the selectmen, and was about [528]*528to deposit a vote for representative, but was refused; he would have voted against Uobinson,
Aivan Child deposed as follows ; 41 have been a resident of Webster for several years ; in November last, at the town-meeting for the choice of governor, lieutenant-governor, senators, and representative to the general court, my name was called by the chairman of the board of selectmen as a legal voter, and I supposed I was a legal voter, having paid a tax within two years. I voted for governor, lieutenant-governor, senators and representative. After I had deposited my votes, my right to vote was challenged, on the ground that I had not paid a tax assessed within two years. I then immediately paid my tax for 1843, and the selectmen turned the ballot-box and commenced calling the list of voters as before; and when they came to my name they refused to let me vote, and I did not vote. I should have voted for Calvin Chamberlain as representative to the general court from this town/
Bradford Marcy deposed as follows : * I removed into the town of Webster the fore part of April, 1843, from Dudley. I paid a tax assessed against me in Dudley in 1842 ; on the morning of the 13th of November, 1843, Mr. Dyer Freeman, one of the selectmen of Webster, asked me if I wished my name inserted on the list of voters of Webster. I told him I did want it on, saying I had not paid the tax against me in Webster, but had my receipt for the payment of my tax last year in Dudley. lie, Mr. Freeman, then said, I will see that your name is put on the list of voters. Near the close of the meeting, I went to the desk of the selectmen, and the chairman of the board said my name was on the list. I accordingly deposited my votes for governor, lieutenant-governor, senators, and for a representative. He then looked for my name on the list and found it had not been inserted. He then said I must take my vote out of the boxes, which I did, supposing I must. I should have voted for Calvin Chamberlain/
It was also given in evidence, that one James 0. Tourtelott, a single person, went to Webster in September, 1842, from Connecticut, to work, boarded in Webster until the 1st of May, 1843, and then accompanied the family he had boarded with to Dudley, where he continued to board with this family till the last of August following, when the family with whom he was boarding removed back to Webster, and he accompanied them, and continued in Webster until after the election in November last.
The family, with whom Tourtelott boarded when they removed to Dudley, had no idea of making other than a temporary residence there.
Tourtelott was assessed a tax in Dudley in May last, and paid his tax there, which was the only tax he had ever paid in this state. During the four months in which he lived in Dudley, he worked in Webster, and on the thirteenth day of November last, he voted in Webster for Calvin Chamberlain as representative to the general court.
The selectmen gave in evidence, that although the name of Aivan Child was on the check list, yet as he had not paid a tax within two years, his vote was challenged, and on that ground, rejected, and his name was stricken from the list of voters; after-wards another person paid his (Child’s) tax, and he again claimed his right to vote, but it was rejected, it being too late to insert his name again upon the list of voters after the poll was opened.
They likewise gave in evidence, that Bradford Marcy’s name was not on the list of voters, no evidence having been brought before the board of selectmen previous to the opening of the poll that he had the requisite qualifications.
With regard to the case of Wood, the selectmen said that when his name was [529]*529sailed, 1 he came forward and voted and his name was checked on the list, but whether he voted for representative or not we cannot say.’

The whole number of votes east was 224, Solomon Robinson bad 114, and was declared elected, 113 being necessary for a choice,

A majority of the committee on elections, to whom the subject was referred,1 were of opinion that the votes of Eddy, Tourtelott, and Adams should have been rejected, and that the vote of Child should have been received, which would give the following result.

To the 224 votes received, add Child’s, and the whole number is 225 ; deduct Eddy’s, Adams’s, and lourtelott’s, and 222 remain; necessary for a choice, 112; Robinson had 114; or after deducting Eddy’s and Adams’s, 112,

The majority, therefore, on the 4th of March recommended that the petitioners have leave to withdraw their petition,

A minority of the committee, dissenting from the views of the majority, made a separate report,2 This report admits that the votes of Eddy and Adams should have been rejected and the vote of Child received, but contends that the vote of Pratt also should have been rejected, and that of Marcy received. It considers Tourtellott to have been a legal voter, though in the view of the minority the question, whether he was, or was not such, could not affect the result.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Rep. Cont. El. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-masshserep-1844.