Certificates of Members
Certificates of Members
Opinion of the Court
On the seventh of January, 1845, the certificates of the members of the house were referred
On the 15th the committee reported.
The report then proceeds as follows :—
“ The eighth section of the fifth chapter of the Revised Statutes makes it the duty of the selectmen of towns, within three days after the election of a representative, either by a constable or some other person by them specially authorized, to give notice of the choice to the person elected, and the tenth section of the same chapter provides, that the certificate of the person chosen shall have a return thereon, signed by the constable or other person specially authorized to give notice, stating that notice of the choice was given to the person elected, and that said person was summoned to attend the general court accordingly. All the certificates examined by the committee, except two, contain returns stating that the person or persons elected were duly notified and summoned. In one of the cases, where no such return was made by a constable or person specially authorized, there is an endorsement on the certificate that the representative elected, ‘being himself the constable of the town,’ was notified and summoned by the selectmen. In the other case, there being no such return on the certificate, the committee have ascertained from the sitting member, that being himself one of the selectmen, notice and summons were deemed unnecessary.
The design of the law seems to be to give the representative official information of his election, and for that purpose, it imposes a duty on certain officers of the town. But if that duty has been neglected, if the person chosen has not been notified and summoned, the defect seems to be supplied by his appearing and taking his seat in the house; otherwise it might be in the power of town officers, by their own delinquency, to infringe the rights of a representative who had been legally chosen.
This construction of the law, so far as the committee have been able to ascertain, has been adopted by the house heretofore. They therefore report that all the certificates which they have examined are correct in form.”
This report was forthwith agreed to.
Note. At the next session, in 1846, the committee on elections made a report upon the returns of the members of the house, referring to the foregoing, and taking similar ground in regard to three cases in which the members had not been duly notified, and that report was agreed to as soon as made.
67 J. H. 48.
Same, 101.
67 J. H. 101.
68 J. H. 11, 37.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.