Willard v. Pike

59 Vt. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 59 Vt. 202 (Willard v. Pike) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Pike, 59 Vt. 202 (Vt. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Veazey, J.

The action is trespass with a count in trover [206]*206for the conversion of four shares of bank stock. The defence was a justification under tax warrants. The trial was by jury, and the verdict was for the defendant. The defendant, to show the validity of the taxes, put in evidence the grand list books of his town, St. Johnsbury, and the field books, for 1882, ’83, and ’84, and they were received subject to all legal objections-. No general exception was taken or allowed, and ought not to have been, to this general ruling and admission of evidence. It was the duty of the plaintiff’s counsel to specify wherein these books Avere defective, .if he Avanted an exception to their admission. It was not the duty of the court to search the books for defects. The general objection was sufficient to save the plaintiff’s right to specific rulings on defects that were called to the attention of the court before the case was finally submitted to the jury, but it Avent no farther. Hills v. Marlboro, 40 Vt. 648.

The plaintiff’s points are so numerous we follow the order of the brief, lest some may be omitted.

I. The defendant offered in evidence a certificate, or Avhat purported to be that, of the president of the county equalizing-board in book “B.” No proof Avas offered as to identity of handwriting, or who in fact was the president of that board.

The court held that the certificate being in the form required by laAv and signed by a person professing to act as president of the board, the defendant need not prove more, and that this proof Avas prima facie sufficient, to which the plaintiff excepted.

That certificate is required by sec. 303 of the Revised Laws to be endorsed on the list of the town, and signed by the president of the board, Avho was a public official, all in the form precisely as this certificate showed.

It does not appear, and no claim is made, that the list thus certified was not found in the hands of the proper depository. We hold that the ruling was correct. As to town and county clerks, magistrates and other officers having prescribed statutory duties which they have to authenticate by attestation or [207]*207certificate, proof of the officer’s handwriting, and that the person is the officer he purports to be, is not required in first instance. Lemington v. Blodgett, 37 Vt. 210; Hubbard v. Dewey, 2 Aik. 312; State v. Potter, 52 Vt. 33; Benedict v. Heineberg, 43 Vt. 231.

It is a general presumption of law that a man, acting in a public capacity, was properly appointed, and is duly authorized to perform the duties prescribed by law for such official. This is so under the maxim, Omnia praesumuntur rite et solenniter esse acta donee probetur in contrarium. Broom, p. *849; Rex v. Verelst, 3 Camp. 432; Bank of U. S. v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 69.

II. It. appeared that the listers of 1883 and 1884 made some alterations in the lists after the time specified by law for them to be completed and filed, but not in the manner provided by law. The plaintiff claimed that any such material additions or alterations of the lists were illegal, and would render the whole grand list void. The court held that while the listers could legally make additions only in the manner specified in the statute after May 15, yet- if they made them not in that manner, such alterations or additions, while they might render the listers liable, would not render the grand list void, to which the plaintiff excepted.

In Bellows v. Weeks, 41 Vt. 590, Pierpoint, Ch. J., speaking for the court, says : “ When they had discharged their duties as listers, and had deposited the list with the town clerk, they had no further control over it, or authority in respect to it. Therefore their relation to it was precisely the same as that of any other inhabitant of the town. This principle was expressly decided in Downing v. Roberts, 21 Vt. 441. In. the same case it was. held that alterations made by persons other than the listers were of no effect, and did not invalidate the list as made and deposited by the listers; that it was like the alteration of a written instrument by a stranger.” The logic of these two propositions leads to the conclusion that a list tampered with, even by listers, out of time and [208]*208unauthorized, is not thereby void, but stands good as made and deposited by the listers in time ; for, as the late Chief Justice further said in the same case, “ after the list is returned to the town clerk’s office, the listers would seem to be as much strangers to the instrument as any other persons,” except in supplying omissions as provided in section 352, R. L.

In this case there was no alteration of the plaintiff’s list.

We think there is no ground for sustaining this exception.

III. The listers elected at the annual town meeting, held March 6th, 1883, having resigned, the selectmen called a special town meeting, for March 27th, 1883, at which'a new board was elected, being the board whose action is here attacked.

Check-lists to be used at the special meeting were posted either March 14th or 15th, 1883. The check-list thus posted, as amended by the selectmen, was used at the special meeting without questions then made. The plaintiff asked the court to rule that the election of listers at the special meeting was illegal, for the reason that the town had no legal check-list. The court ruled otherwise, to which the plaintiff excepted.

The objection to the check-list as urged, is that it was not posted thirty days before the special meeting. The proper inference from what is stated in the bill of exceptions, is, that the check-list posted and used at the special meeting was the same, with amendments or corrections, that was posted thirty days before, and used at the annual meeting previously held. Section 2656, R. L., provides that a check-list shall be “ made and used in town meetings in the manner provided for checklists of voters in freemen’s meetings.”

The statute, ch. 6, R. L., provides for the making of the check-list and the posting thereof thirty days before a freemen’s meeting, but further provides in section 70 that at certain special elections ‘ ‘ the check-list used at the preceding freemen’s meeting shall be used with such alterations as the board of civil authority, having given six days’ notice of a meeting for that purpose, may make prior to the day of such election,” [209]*209Special elections at freemen’s meetings, under secs. 70 and 72, E. L., can be held on six days’ notice. Special town meetings require twelve days’ notice.

It is plain, first, that the same check-list, with proper alterations, may be used at a special town meeting as was used at the annual meeting. We also think that owing to the great embarrassment that might be occasioned by requiring a checklist for a special meeting to be posted thirty days before, and in the absence of any express provision to that effect, it was not the intention to require a posting longer than the notice of the meeting. The occasion for special' town meetings often arises suddenly, and demands immediate action, as in this case, where the listers were required to enter upon their duties by the first of April, and had a limited time to complete them.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Vt. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-pike-vt-1886.