Court Opinion

ID: 8046929
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:00:23.418778+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:37:32.177855
License: Public Domain

Bartlett, J.
In the marginal note of Lee v. Deerfield, 3 N. H. 290, it is said that “ where a pauper is shown to have actually stood in need of relief, and supplies have been furnished by the order of one of the selectmen of the town where he happened to be, the assent of the other selectmen to the furnishing of necessary supplies may be presumed by a jury.” Although the court held in that case upon an agreed statement of facts that the plaintiff town was entitled to recover for supplies so furnished, it might have been unnecessary to resort to any such presumption, as the town of Lee had perhaps ratified the action of its selectman by bringing the suit for the supplies he had thus furnished. If the assent of the other selectmen to the act of one in furnishing supplies may be presumed, the presumption is one of fact, to be made by the jury and not by the court. Woodes v. Dennett, 9 N. H. 55; Windsor v. China, 4 Greenl. 298. The report of the referees does not find the fact of the assent of the other selectmen to the action of Sawyer, and it is not the duty of the court to try the question of fact here. Pray v. Burbank, 11 N. H. 290. For this reason the plaintiff' can not have judgment upon the report, as it now stands.
But we do not think the case one where the assent of the other selectmen could be presumed. Our courts have not been inclined to extend the doctrine stated in Lee v. Deerfield. Andover v. Grafton, 7 N. H. 305; Woodes v. Dennett, 9 N. H. 55; Mason v. Bristol, 10 N. H. 38; Glidden v. Unity, 33 N. H. 577. Whether, in cases of suitable supplies furnished to one already decided by the selectmen to be entitled to relief, or to a pauper standing in urgent need of *45immediate assistance, by the order of one selectman, the assent of the other selectmen may be presumed by the jury, need not be discussed here; but if it may it must be limited to “ proper supplies, furnished on proper occasions.” If such assent may ever be presumed to matters other than merely formal, it must be in cases where such prompt action is necessary that it would be impossible to convene the board, or where the actual inconvenience of a previous consultation would practically amount to an impossibility. Lee v. Deerfield, 3 N. H. 291; Woodes v. Dennett, 9 N. H. 57. Here it is sought to charge the town by the action of one selectman in the case of a person not previously determined by the selectmen to be a pauper, and not shown to stand in any urgent need of instant assistance, and not merely for supplies furnished for her immediate relief, but upon a general and unlimited contract for her future support. ¥e see nothing in the case indicating any such urgent necessity for entering into this contract as would render it impossible for the selectmen to confer in regard to it, and nothing in the nature or circumstances of the contract, that would make it a matter of any considerable inconvenience to require such conference. The circumstances of the application and the importance of the contract seem to us especially to entitle the town to the benefit of the wisdom, and prudence of a majority of its selectmen in passing upon them.
As the plaintiff has failed to show any contract made by a majority of the board of selectmen, he has shown no contract binding upon the town ; Andover v. Grafton, 7 N. H. 304; and without such a contract he can not recover of the defendants. Otis v. Strafford, 10 N. H. 354. There must, according to the provisions of the case, be judgment for the defendants upon the report.