Nantucket
Nantucket
Opinion of the Court
The election of Micajah Gardner, returned a member from the town of Nantucket, was controverted by William Coffin, and others,
The petitions in these cases, were presented at the May session, and referred to the committee on elections, who made the following report thereon
“ Town-meetings were duly had and convened in said towns of Nantucket and Sharon, in the month of May last, for the choice of representatives to the present general court. At each of the said meetings, motions were regularly made and seconded (in effect), that each of the said towns should not send representatives to the general court the present year; and the moderators of the several meetings refused to submit the questions for decision, urging that they were prohibited by the constitution and laws of the commonwealth, from putting motions of that nature. It appearing to the committee, that different opinions are formed in different parts of the commonwealth, respecting the question whether a town may constitutionally and legally vote not to send a representative to the general court; notwithstanding the decision of former houses of representatives on this subject, and the opinion of the honorable the justices of the supreme judicial court, which seems to be expressed in the opinion they gave on the question respecting aliens, submitted to them by a former house of representatives ; and inasmuch as the present question was not then directly before the honorable judges, and the committee having had before them some evidence that one of the justices of the supreme judicial court, at the last session of the same, holden in Boston, in the county of Suffolk, and for the comities of Suffolk and Nantucket, on the trial of an indictment, then and there pending against the selectmen of Nantucket, did express an opinion, in some degree contrary to the one incidentally given and expressed as aforesaid; it has, in the opinion of the
Whether a town, having by the constitution a right to send a representative or representatives to the general court, can constitutionally and legally vote not to send a representative, and whether such vote would be binding on a minority of voters dissenting therefrom in such town.”
The report was agreed to, and the order recommended by the committee adopted.
The committee subsequently recommended a reference of these cases to the next session, and they were referred accordingly.
At the January session, a communication was received from the justices of the supreme judicial court, answering both questions in the affirmative.
The committee thereupon reported the facts in these two cases, as already above stated, and concluded: “ That although some doubts may have heretofore existed, whether towns, constitutionally entitled to choose representatives, can legally waive the exercise of their right, yet by recurring to former decisions of this house, as well as the decision of the honorable justices of the supreme judicial court, on questions recently proposed to them, by this house, it is settled, that the right to send a representative is a corporate right, and that a town can constitutionally vote not to send a representative to the general court, if it choose to waive its privilege in that respect. And inasmuch as the qualified voters *in said towns were, in the opinion of the committee, deprived of their constitutional rights, by reason of the motions made as aforesaid not being put to
36 J. H. 12.
Same, 39.
36 J. H. 120.
36 J. H. 126.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.