Plympton
Plympton
Opinion of the Court
The election of Joseph B. Nye, returned a member from the town of Plympton, was controverted by Thomas E. La-ring and others, on the ground, that at the meeting for the election, which was on the day of the general election, November 11th, 1850, before proceeding to the balloting, at which the sitting member was elected, a motion, made by the first named petitioner, was seasonably made, not to send a representative, which motion the selectmen refused to put, but proceeded with the balloting, which terminated in the election of the member returned.
The committee on elections, to whom the ease was referred, received the testimony of several witnesses, adduced by the parties as to the time when the motion not to send was made. The committee reported the same, in detail, together with the following:—
“ The committee find, that the warrant for the town-meeting, held in Plympton, November 11th, 1850, was duly signed by the selectmen of said town, and that legal notice was given of the meeting; and that the only article in the warrant, in relation to the choice of a representative from said town, is as follows, to wit: ‘ Also, to bring in their votes for a representative to represent them in the general court, to be holden in Boston on the first Wednesday of January next.’ A part of the record of said meeting is as follows, to wit: ‘After that the selectmen declared the number of votes given for each person voted for, and that there was no choice of a representative
The committee concluded their report with the statement, that in the opinion of a majority.of them, upon the evidence, the motion in question was seasonably and properly made, and should have been put by the selectmen, and not having been so put, the election subsequently effected was void.
This report, which was made on the 30th of January, was afterwards recommitted to the committee' on elections, with instructions to report the conclusions of fact and the, legal principles, on which they predicated their opinion above stated, that the election was void. They were also directed to receive any further evidence, which might be offered by either party, and were authorized to send for persons and papers.
In pursuance of the recommitment, the committee examined a great number of witnesses produced by the respective parties, whose testimony was reported at length. The committee then proceed as follows :—
“ Arid, now, from this great mass of testimony, taken in connection with that given at the former hearing, the committee are directed, by the order of recommitment, ‘ to report the conclusions of fact and legal principles on which they ground their opinion.’
Here the rule is clearly laid down, that towns have the constitutional right to vote not to send a representative; and the committee are of opinion, that for good and sound reasons this rule ought to be sacredly observed ; and consequently it follows, irresistibly, that if a town have this constitutional right to vote not to send a representative, when a motion is regularly made not to send one, it; is a legitimate motion, and it is the imperious duty of the presiding officer to entertain it, and to submit it to the decision of the meeting.
The decision aforesaid of our supreme judicial court is of long standing, and has been observed and conformed to by successive legislatures ever since its promulgation. And the committee cannot presume, that there will be any serious ob-
The next question to be considered is, whether, when a motion is seasonably and properly made, not to send a representative, and the presiding officer refuses to put the motion, it vitiates and renders void an election subsequently made. Tin-only difficulty which occurs to the committee, in the way of a ready answer to this question, is, that it is uncertain whether a majority of the legal voters are or are not in favor of the motion. And it can be said with some degree of plausibility, that inasmuch as the wishes of the majority have not been ascertained, and by a subsequent act a representative has been chosen, it must, be presumed that a majority were in favor of sending. But it must be considered, that in .reaching such a result, the constitutional rights of the qualified voters have been violated, in the presiding officer's refusing to submit to them a legitimate motion. And an act, based upon this violation, can hardly be considered legal. And again ; it is very far from a certainty, that a majority were opposed to the motion, merely because, after being deprived of a constitutional right and privilege, enough of the voters tamely submitted, to carry out the illegal determination of the presiding officer. And the committee are of opinion, that if the presiding officer at the election, now under consideration, did wilfully refuse to put the motion not to send a representative, the, same being seasonably and properly made, it was an illegal act, which vitiated and rendered void the election subsequently made.
They are supported and confirmed in this opinion by a series of decisions, heretofore made by the house of representatives in analogous eases ; and would refer to the several cases of Westminster, (ante, page. 32,) Nantucket and Sharon, (195,) Roxbury, (157,) Winslow, (201.) Southbridge, (215,) Boston, (221,) Charlestown, (226); and also the case of the town of Adams, (ante, 339,) where the chairman refused to put a motion to adjourn, and it was decided, that such a refusal vitiated .an election subsequently made.
The doubt, which existed in some minds at the meeting, as testified of, and which was suggested in this house, at the former debate upon this subject, whether such a motion could legally be made and entertained, after the meeting had been opened, and the voting had begun upon the first ballot, seems to the committee to be utterly unfounded. It is entirely contrary to the uniform practice in all our towns, and in many instances, would place town-meetings in a singular predicament. Most of the towns are desirous of being represented, and entertain sanguine expectations of being able to elect. They go into the election to accomplish the object, but after balloting a reasonable number of times, they become satisfied that it is impossible to concentrate a majority of voters upon any single candidate. Can it be contended that they are obliged, without hope, to continue the fruitless struggle ad infinitum ? Besides, to dissolve the meeting would frequently destroy others of its objects. The committee do not feel inclined to waste any more time or words upon such a question. The material question is, — was Mr. Loring’s motion not to send a representative made seasonably, in regard to the proceedings of the meeting, at the time it was made? Was it made before the voting had really and substantially commenced upon the second ballot, in which the sitting member was elected ? If it was so made, then Mr. Nye was illegally elected. But if it was not made until that balloting had palpably and intentionally commenced, then the petitioners have not made out their case.
One thing appears very evident, and ought to be kept constantly in mind, throughout the whole investigation of the tes-
The committee are fully aware, that the testimony above set forth is very conflicting upon the.point of precedence between the commencement of the second balloting and Mr. Loring’s motion; but they would suggest whether this state of affairs has not arisen in a great measure by mistakes in recollection. No doubt that all testify as .they now really believe, but it is after a lapse of considerable time ; when partizans have grown warm, and a new and unexpected point has arisen ; when the mind, heated by party feeling, and rendered susceptible of receiving almost any bias, is called upon to recollect accurately the order of proceedings in one particular, which had not been called to the attention of any one before. In a case of controverted facts, where the testimony relates to trans
Then again, Mr. Loring himself, who had been requested to make the motion, before the result of the first ballot was known, if it turned out to be no choice, and was waiting attentively for the declaration of the result, that he might immediately make his motion, would be very likely to remember how and when he made it. In connection with this, must be taken into consideration the testimony of Samuel Bradford, who had no desire to prevent the election of a representative, but says he wanted to send. He testifies that he was anxious to make a motion to adjourn, and meant to make it immediately after the declaration of no choice should be made ; but that Mr. Loring was quicker than he could be, and succeeded in getting his motion made first. Now these witnesses, together with others similarly situated, being particularly interested in regard to the point of time when the motion was made, would be very likely to recollect it accurately.
It would be tedious and perhaps of little use, to go into a particular analysis of all. the testimony bearing upon this question. A majority of the committee think that it strongly
The committee are of the farther opinion, that if the chairman did call for votes immediately after the declaration of no choice, and thereupon and forthwith, Mr, Loring made his motion; it was the duty of the chairman to have suspended or revoked his call, so that a fair and reasonable opportunity could have been given for discussion, and the decision of the meeting thereon,
A majority of the committee are therefore of opinion, that Mr, Loring’s motion was a proper and legal motion, although not expressly, in so many words, written in the warrant; that it was made and seconded in due season; that a suitable and reasonable time ought to have been afforded for its discussion and decision, before proceeding to ballot the seebnd time; that as the presiding officer at the meeting refused to entertain this motion, the subsequent proceedings in electing a representative were illegal and void, and that the sitting member from Plymp-ton is not entitled to a seat in this house.”
Two members of the committee, (Messrs. Schouler and Story,) dissented from the conclusions both of fact and law stated in the report, and presented their views thereon as follows :—
“ The evidence in this case is exceedingly voluminous and contradictory. It is difficult to say, exactly, what it proves or disproves, in regard to the points at issue. The undersigned will, however, endeavor to state, as clearly and concisely as may be, what appears to their minds to be its fair result.
The certificate of the member is good prima facie evidence,
It thus appears to the undersigned, that the petitioners have wholly failed to make out their case. If it shall not appear to the house, that the holding out of the box, accompanied by a call for votes, was of itself sufficient to make a subsequent motion improper, (that call, so accompanied, Being in the nature of a full question stated, like a question to be taken by yeas and nays, of which the affirmative and negative are simultaneously put, and after which, no motion is in order,) yet the deposit of the two votes, or of a single vote, though co-instantaneous with the motion not to send, settles the question in favor of the sitting member, as the right of one voter to put in his vote, after the chairman’s call, was certainly as good as that of another to make a motion. The chairman of the selectmen has no recollection of admitting these two votes; he appears to have been in a state of great agitation at the time ; but it appears that while he had not yet noticed Mr. Loring’s motion, the other two selectmen, at least, had noticed the two voters, and allowed the votes to go in. Mr. Bumpus, the third selectman, confirms the testimony of Mr. Bisbee and the rest, as to the vote of Mr. E. S. Wright, and thus it certainly appears in the highest degree probable, that that gentleman’s vote went into the box, while Mr. Loring was yet speaking, and the vote of Mr. Ellis immediately afterwards, before
It appears obvious, that no actual injury has been suffered by this refusal of the selectmen, to put the question on the motion not to send. If those who desired to vote in the affirmative were the majority, they could gain their object with but slight trouble by depositing their votes ; if a minority, they would lose it in any event. If any of them choose to retire from the meeting in wrath, or congratulating themselves upon the strength of their technical ground, they must take the consequences of their error, whatever they may be. It will hardly be maintained, that an error of the selectmen is to be magnified by the views which a portion of the voters may choose to take of it, and by the steps they adopt in consequence. A voter, certainly, ought to have no more weight out of the meeting than in it, and it cannot be held that fifty voters, by leaving the meeting, can nullify the acts of a hundred who remain.
The undersigned have no doubt, that if their view of the result of the evidence is taken by the house, the sitting member will be confirmed in his seat. But they do not leave the case here. On the contrary, they are prepared to maintain, that upon the very state of facts set up by the petitioners, the member has a right to his seat.
They will admit, for the further purposes of this argument, that the motion not to send was made and seconded at a proper time, and ruled out of order by the selectmen. And they contend, that even upon this hypothesis, to deprive the member of his seat would be contrary to the clear fundamental policy of the commonwealth, and to the weight of established precedent and law.
As the argument would be similar, upon the ground that
There is no imputation of fraud in this ease. The seleetment were acting fairly, and endeavoring to do their duty. The question, then, is this: Is the neglect or refusal to put a motion not to send a representative, regularly made and seconded, sufficient, of itself, to invalidate an election subsequently made ? The fact that the chairman gave an unsound reason for not putting the motion is of no consequence. The question is not of what he said or did not say, but of what he did, or refused to do.
The fault, then, for which the town is said to deserve to lose its representative, was an error of judgment on the part of the chairman of the meeting, on a question of parliamentary law, applicable to his duty at the time. Now, the undersigned think it clear, that the house, in its capacity of a court, which settles the law relating to cases of elections, is bound to lay down for the towns certain clear and fundamental principles; not to frame a nice and technical system, but merely to inculcate those rules of common law, or, what is the same, of experienced common sense, which underlie the whole law respecting public meetings, and which have obtained with the'Anglo-Saxon race, from the earliest times. These principles are few, and of universal application and recognized utility. The first is, that there must be a presiding officer; the second, that there must be a recording officer. These are already provided for in the case of town-meetings, by statute. Next in order come these three; that only one thing can be done at one time ; that whatever is proposed to the meeting for its action must be proposed through the chair; and that the meeting must control the chair. There is nothing in these too nice for ordinary use, and these, it seems to the undersigned, ought to be recognized by the house, as being, what in fact they are, a part of the common law. To apply these principles to the present case; the chair, as is admitted, for the sake of the argument, ruled incorrectly on the point of order; the voter who made, the motion had the right
It may be further urged, that the selectmen acting at elections are officers of the law, and, so in certain particulars, not under the control of the meetings over which they preside. If this be not so, then the previous argument applies: if it be so, how can it be held that the towns shook! sutler for their error? If the fault be serious, the selectmen should be punished in their own persons. If there be now no law to punish them, a law can be made for future offenders in the like kind, and it is not the fault of the town of Plympton, that it does not now exist.
It appears to the undersigned, also, that it is the duty of the house to encourage in the several towns a candid, liberal and earnest mode of transacting their business at elections, — not a small and hair-splitting method, — and where a minority is found to aim at carrying its point by a trick of special pleading, rather than, by an honest endeavor to convince and convert, or to out-vote its opponents, that course certainly is not to be favored.
It further appears very clearly, that the object of the constitution is, that the people shall be represented in the house, not that they shall vote not to send. This point might be labored at great length, but the argument is too obvious, and has been too often reiterated, to permit the undersigned to do mere than to allude to it, so far as if bears on the question of the true policy of the house in the premises.
The last point, to which attention is desired, is this, that the weight of precedent is in favor of the sitting member.
The fundamental law on the subject is, of course, the constitution. In that instrument, chapter 1, section 3, article 2, it is provided, that the towns may send representatives to the general court, in certain modes and under certain limb,ohms, and further, that the house of representatives shall have power, from time to time, to impose fines upon such towns a-, shall neglect to choose and return members to the same.
These provisions, of course, import at once a privilege and a
‘ The right of sending representatives is corporate, vested in the town, and the right of choosing them is personal, vested in the legal voters. Because the right of sending a representative is corporate, if the town, by a legal corporate act, vote not to send a representative, none can be legally chosen by a minority dissenting from that vote. This corporate right is also a corporate duty, for the neglect of which, a fine may be assessed and levied upon all the inhabitants liable to pay public taxes.’
Subsequently to this, the case of Roxbury, 1813-14,
On the contrary, those consequence's are, that, whether the house, which first asked the opinion, supposed that, as usual, the justices of that court meant something more than they said (whereas in fact they had gone to the very outmost verge of construction); and acted upon the ground, that the opinion, that a town liad a right to vote not to send, implied that that right ought to be exercised and encouraged ; or whether it thought that temporary grounds of expediency justified its course, it certainly proceeded to offer a premium upon that motion, greater than was allowed to any other; and the result is, that the decisions upon this point, blazing with their own singularity, and with, the borrowed lustre of the opinions of the justices, stand out like beacons in the sea of lave ; but in the opinion of the undersigned, it is better to sail away front them, than towards them. There are dangerous rocks where they stand.
But to retrace the argument. Next to the Roxbury ease, came that of Nantucket, in 1814-15, (ante, 180.) where there were other substantial circumstances also to govern the decision of tlie house, besides the, neglect of the motion not to send, and among those circumstances was the reading of the riot act, and the dispersion of the meeting by the sheriff.
In the next year, were the twin cases of Nantucket and Sharon, {ante, 195,) pending the decision upon which, the opinion of the justices was asked upon the question, whether a town could legally vote not to send a representative, so that that vote should bind a dissenting minority. The justices, in
This surprise was somewhat lessened by the perusal of an opinion of Mr. Justice Preble, of Maine,
Asking pardon for this digression, the undersigned proceed to say, that the case of Nantucket and Sharon was decided
The house, again, may well be supposed to have acted with reference to the desired diminution of its own members. The evil thus sought to be corrected has also ceased, though the undersigned willingly admit, that this last argument might be pressed at a more favorable time than the present.
It may also be remarked, that in all the decisions on this point, the refusal to put the motion occurred at the opening of the meeting, and it would be going a step beyond any of them to unseat the member in this case. If this voting not to send has been deemed a valuable medicine, it has never been held, that the selectmen were bound to give their patients more than one opportunity to ask for it on the same day. But the undersigned gladly remark, that the decisions on this side stop here in 1819-20. There is no new law on the subject on this side.
The undersigned consider the question now standing as a new one, with decisions on both sides, some of the earlier and the last on their side, the intermediate on the other. But they find, that in the case of the Adams election in 1836, (ante, 339,) a motion was regularly made, and seconded, (under circumstances, too, which rendered it reasonable.) to adjourn to the next day; that the selectmen refused to put it; that the committee on elections of the house, on the authority, doubtless, of the decisions above cited, reported the election void; and that the house, though of a political complexion different from that of the two members, rejected the report, and took no further action upon the subject; which was precisely equivalent to a vote that the members were entitled to their seats. There is some ground for supposing, that the zeal of the minority of
It is a customary remark among uninformed persons, that the decisions of the house, upon questions of elections, are loose and irregular. It will be found upon examination more correct to say, that they have been regularly lenient.
In reviewing the course of decisions, upon cases in any degree analogous to the present, from ilie adoption of the constitution to the year 1843, (farther than which, the undersigned have not extended this particular inquiry.) only ten elections have been held void, in cases controverted on the ground of irregular conduct of selectmen. Among those which have been sustained, are found repeated cases where selectmen have violated most important parliamentary rales; and even the most express and valuable provisions of statutes, of remote as well as recent date, with reference to the time of violation; and the conclusion therefore presents itself, that unless the refusal to put this particular motion, that the town neglect its duty, be held a more heinous offence than any other which, it is within the capacity of a selectman to commit, the member from Plympton is entitled to Ids seat, even upon the state of facts assumed to exist by the petitioners themselves.
If it be said, that this part, of the defence stands upon technical grounds, it is replied, that, the point presented by the petitioners is purely technical. A legal argument upon a point of
Finally, the undersigned repeat, that if their view of the facts in the case be deemed the correct one, or if it be not affirmatively shown to be incorrect, so as to rebut the presumption of law, then it must be admitted that the election was valid. If, on the other hand, the view of the facts taken by the petitioners be deemed and taken to be established beyond a reasonable doubt, even then, to hold the election void would be, in their deliberate judgment, to violate the plainest principles of public policy, and to re-establish the authority of unfortunate precedents, the reasons for making which have ceased to exist, and which may fairly be considered as wholly overthrown by subsequent decisions.
The undersigned can therefore only arrive at this conclusion, that the member from Plympton is entitled to his seat, and that the petitioners have leave to withdraw their petition.”
The report was amended, by striking out the concluding paragraph, and substituting therefor the conclusion stated by the minority ; and the report, as amended, being agreed to,
Resolved, That the member returned from Plympton is entitled to his seat, and that the petitioners have leave to withdraw their petition.
This is a mistake ; the committee in that-case reported against the election; hut the house rejected the report.
See the case of Charlestown, ante, 226.
See the ease of Charlestown, ante, 226, and the case of Boston, 221, to this point.
Reprinted in the present volume.
Westminster, 1790-1, ante, 32; Topsham, 1802-3, ante, 43.
In the Westminster case, the memorialists say : — “The principle held out and acted upon, that every town has a right to vote they will not send a member to the general court, strikes at the very nerves of the constitution, and throws the people into anarchy at once.”
Ante, 120.
Ante, 157.
Thomas Thorpe, who was speaker of the house of commons, in the 31 of H. YL, was sued by Richard, duke of York, during the recess of parliament, in the exchequer. The plaintiff obtained a judgment and execution, upon which Thorpe was arrested and committed to the Fleet prison. When the parliament met, after the recess, the whole house of commons presented a petition to the lords, for the enlargement of their speaker. The lords, thereupon, as appears by the record, “ not intending to impeach or hurt the liberties and privileges of them, that were commons for the said conirnunalities of this land to this present parliament, but legally, after the course of law, to minister justice, and to have knowledge what the law will weigh in that behalf, opened and declared to the justices the premises; and asked of them, whether the said Thomas ought to be delivered from prison, by force and virtue of the privilege of parliament or not. To the which question, the chief justice, in the name of all the justices, after sad communication, and mature deliberation, had among them, answered and said : — That they ought not to answer to that question ; for it hath not been used aforetime, that the justices should in anywise determine the privilege of this high court of parliament; for it is so high and mighty in this nature, that it may make law, and that that is law, it may make no law; and the determination and knowledge of that privilege helongeth to the lords of the parliament, and not to the justices : Rut, as for the declaration of proceeding in the lower courts, in such cases, as writs of supersedeas of privileges of parliament be brought and delivered, the said chief justice said, there be many and divers supersedeas of privilege of parliament brought into the courts; but there is no general supersedeas brought to surcease all processes ; for, if there should be, it should seem that this high court of parliament that ministreth all justice and equity, should lett the process of (he common law; and so it should put the parties complainant without any remedy, for so much as actions at common law be not determined in this high court of parliament; and if any person, that Is a member of this high court of parliament, be arrested in such cases as be not for treason or felony, or surety of the peace, or for a condemnation had before the parliament, it is used, that all such persons should be released of such arrests,,and make an attorney, so that they may have their freedom and liberty freely to intend upon the parliament.” The lords, upon this answer, resolved that Thorpe, “ according to the law,” should still remain in prison for the cause stated; “ the privilege of parliament, or that the same Thomas was speaker of the parliament, notwithstanding
The reasons assigned by the judges, for declining to express an opinion on the question of privilege, though probably true at that time and long afterwards, namely, that pdvilege is not defined by law, but is whatever the house, in their discretion, may choose to make it, would not be generally admitted, at the present day, in England, and certainly does not, if it ever did, exist in this country.
Ante, 198,
6 Greenleaf’s Reps, App. 496,
Journal of the Constitutional Convention, page 36.
73 J. H. 549.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.