Attleborough
Attleborough
Opinion of the Court
7 The return from the town of Attleborough certified, that two of the members returned were duly elected, and, in relation to the third contained a statement of facts, upon which the selectmen of said town referred the question, whether Israel Hatch, the member thus returned, was duly elected or not, to the determination of the house.
“ That at a meeting legally held for the choice of representatives, in the town of Attleborough, on the 5th day of May last, it was voted to send three representatives ; that said representatives were balloted for separately; that, at the first two bal-lotings, the two members returned from said town appear to have been duly elected ; that eight several balloting» were had for the choice, of the third representative, at each and all of which the selectmen present and presiding declared, that there was no choice; and that, after these eight balloting,» had been thus completed, the meeting was duly adjourned to the 10th day of May last, when it was, in legal town-meeting, voted to reconsider the vote to send three representatives, and to send but two, and the meeting was then dissolved. At each of the aforesaid eight ballotings, the sitting member, Israel Hatch, Esq, had a plurality of the votes given in. The certificate of the selectmen, by him presented, states this fact, and concludes, conditionally, in the following words: —
‘ If the votes for David Pidge, Lydia Jones, Hannah Pidge, Mary Lathrop, and Redmond Claillin ought not to be counted, on the ground of their ineligibility to the office of representative, then was the said Israel Hatch, Esq,, elected as the third representative to represent said town as aforesaid.’ ’
The committee ascertained, that the entire rejection of the votes for Lydia Jones, Hannah Pidge, Mary Lathrop, and Redmond Claftin, would not, at any one balloting, affect the result. After a patient, investigation, protracted, at the repeated request of the sitting member, a yet further continuance was granted, to give him an opportunity to produce evidence, that he had a majority of the legal votes, at any one balloting; but the only evidence to this effect, by him produced, was the deposition of one Benjamin C. Richardson, which, in the opinion of the committee, is not entitled to credit. As to the eligibility of David Pidge, the committee
The report was recommitted,
The report was placed among the orders of the day, and on the sixteenth of February was agreed to.
A resolve, providing for the pay of Mr. Hatch, was after-wards introduced and rejected by the house.
49 J. H. 34, 41, 80.
Same, 193.
49 J. H. 214.
Same, 279.
Same, 293.
Same, 392.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.