Woodcock v. Bolster

35 Vt. 632
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 Vt. 632 (Woodcock v. Bolster) 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
Woodcock v. Bolster, 35 Vt. 632 (Vt. 1863).

Opinion

Poland, Ch. J.

The first of the plaintiff’s objections to the sufficiency'of the defendant’s justification is, that the defendant was not legally elected collector.

This rests wholly upon the ground that the meeting of the district, at which he was elected, was notified by a person who was not legally holding the office of clerk of the district. He was elected clerk at the annual meeting of the district in March, 1859, which is conceded to have been a valid election, and was also elected clerk at the meeting of the distrtet on the 12th of March, 1861, called by the selectmen to re-organize the district, and no other person had been elected or appointed to the office in the meantime.

It is claimed that he could not legally be regarded as holding the office under the election of 1859, by reason of the acts passed in 1859 and 1860, and the failure of the district to cause a school to be kept in the district for the period of four months during the school year succeeding April 1, 1860 ; that thereby the district offices became absolutely vacated, and the officers last elected wholly disqualified to act, whether the selectmen appointed others or not. We are of opinion that the language of the acts referred to, does not require so stringent an interpretation, and that the failure of the district to cause a school to be kept as provided, is to be treated as a cause or reason for vacating the offices, but that the officers are not absolutely displaced and ejected [636]*636from office, until the proper steps have been taken, and the selectmen have taken action upon the matter, and appointed others. It might be a matter of dispute, whether there had been a failure on the part of the district, to cause a school to be kept for the required period ; there might be a failure of but a single day, and that might be the result of mistake or accident, so as not to bring the case within the spirit, though within the letter of the statute, so that the selectmen might refuse to interfere and make a new appointment. Or it might happen, that there had been a failure to make exact compliance, when all parties supposed there had been such a compliance, and the district officers had consequently gone forward in the prosecution of their appropriate official duties. If, on subsequent discovery of this failure, all the acts of the district officers are to be held void, and they liable for all their official acts as wrong doers, it would lead to great mischief. This interpretation saves all the beneficial purpose of the statute, by giving the selectmen the power of removal, by the appointment of others, and avoids the many evils that might flow from the adoption of the plaintiff’s view, that such failure absolutely determines the office, so that the officer has no power to act. And this view of the statute is by no means a novel one.

In many cases where statutes have used the word void, it has been construed to mean voidable; ground or cause for making void.

So where statutes use the word, forfeit, or forfeiture, they have usually been construed to mean cause of forfeiture; and some proceeding or action must be had to effect it, before any actual forfeiture is incurred. Without reference therefore to the election of March, 1861, we think the clerk, who called the meeting at which the defendant was elected, held the office, so that his act in calling the meeting was legal.

There is no claim now made that the district had become disorganized so that there was any proper occasion for a new organization. But another election at this meeting of the former clerk to the same office could not prejudice his right to hold it under the former election.

But if the clerk, who warned the meeting at which the defendant was elected collector, held the office only in virtue of the election [637]*637at the meeting called by the selectmen, we think it would not render the defendant’s election invalid. The clerk held and exercised the office by virtue of an election at a meeting of the voters of the district, publicly called, and held the office de facto, which, so far .as third persons are concerned, is all that is required to make his acts valid. This well settled doctrine, as to the validity of the official acts of persons acting under color of office, where some irregularity has occurred in his appointment, or election, or induction into office, where others are concerned, is especially important as applied to school districts, whose proceedings are usually conducted by men little versed in legal learning, and often by men of small attainments in any branch of education or business.

Suppose, at a school district meeting for the choice of officers, the notice lacks one day of the number required by statute. The election is so far invalid that none of the officers could justify in a suit brought against himself for any official act.

But if the clerk elected at such meeting calls the next annual meeting of the district, at which officers are elected, are those elections invalid, on account of the irregularity in his election ? If so, the same consequence would attend the next election, and the district thus become effectually disorganized.

The plaintiff’s second objection to the defence set up is, that the tax which the defendant had to collect, was illegally assessed, because the committee who assessed it, and who was elected by the district, was an unnaturalized foreigner, who, as he claims, could not vote in the meetings of the district, and was not eligible to any office in the district. It has been suggested by the defendant’s counsel, that if such person was not legally eligible to the office, still he might be an officer de facto, whose official acts would bind third persons. But this doctrine, we think, could not be extended to cover a case where by law the person could not hold the office, and if such foreigner was not by law eligible to the office of committee, his acts cannot be regarded as valid, any more than those of a woman or minor who should be elected to the same office.

The question presented is certainly one of very considerable practical importance, as it is conceded that the right to hold [638]*638office in the district, and the right to vote in school meeting, depend alike on the answer, and still further that the right of voting in town meetings, and of holding a town office, are subject to precisely the same objection and to the same extent.

The provision of the statute in relation to voters in school districts, is as follows : “ And any man of the age of twenty-one years, who, at the time, shall reside, and be liable to pay taxes in such district, shall be a legal voter in the same” ; sec. 23, chap. 20, Com. Stat. p. 146.

The right to vote in town meetings is thus defined in the statute : “ Every male person of the age of twenty-one years, whose list shall have been taken in any town the year preceding his voting, and all persons exempt from taxation in consequence of having arrived at the age of sixty years, shall, during their residence in such town, be legal voters in town meeting” ; sec. 1, chap. 15, Comp. Stat. 112.

It will be found by examining the earlier statutes of the state, that these provisions in relation to the right of voting in town and school district meetings have been substantially the same-as now, from the beginning almost of our state legislation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Vt. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodcock-v-bolster-vt-1863.