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eCases

Supreme Court of New Hampshire

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Citation Numbers: 36 A. 510, 67 N.H. 1

Judges: DOE, C. J.<footnote_reference>[fn*]</footnote_reference> <footnote_body><footnote_number>[fn*]</footnote_number> The result reached by the court in this case was announced by DOE, C. J., at the March adjourned term, 1887, in the following words: \"Dow a. v. NORTHERN RAILROAD a. Decree for plaintiffs. The majority of the justices sitting in the case are of opinion that the lease is invalid; that it is a fundamental change of the business of the Northern Railroad Corporation, to the making of which by corporate vote, not unanimous, under an exercise of the reserved power of amendment, the corporators did not assent when they accepted the charter. ALLEN, J., dissents. Any necessary orders may be made at the trial term, or by any justice in vacation. \"The decree is made to-day; the injunction to take effect July 1, 1887.\" SMITH and CLARK, JJ., concurred in the decision. ALLEN, J., dissented. BLODGETT, CARPENTER, and BINGHAM, JJ., did not sit. At the time when the above result was announced no opinion had been written. Subsequently the chief justice prepared a lengthy written opinion. The manuscript was not, in his lifetime, submitted to his colleagues, nor furnished to the reporter. It was withheld by him with the intention of revising it; an intention which ill health and the pressure of other duties prevented him from carrying out. In the present report of the opinion some parts of the manuscript are omitted. The omissions consist principally of two classes: (1) Passages which simply furnish additional illustrations and arguments in support of views which are fully stated in the portions of the opinion here printed. (2) Numerous lengthy quotations from authorities (references, however, being here given to the authorities from which these extracts were made). The propriety of making the latter class of omissions may fairly be said to have been submitted to Judge Doe's approval. He consented to allow selections to be made from the manuscript, for publication in the shape of essays in the Harvard Law Review (vol. 6, pp. 161-183 and pp. 213-222; vol. 8, pp. 295-316 and pp. 396-414). The person making the selections abbreviated portions of the opinion by omitting numerous extracts from authorities; and the proof-sheets of these Review articles were revised by Judge Doe. A reprint of the portions of the opinion thus published would, it is believed, contain all the most essential matter; and such was probably Judge Doe's own view when he consented to the publication of the selections. Some additions, however, have now been made from parts of the manuscript not used in those publications; and, in the matter previously printed, a few changes have been made in conformity with Judge Doe's pencil annotations upon the printed pages. It is probable that the arrangement of topics in the opinion as here printed does not correspond entirely to the original order in the manuscript. The pages of the manuscript were not numbered, and the taking out of portions to print in the Review resulted in some confusion. Whatever the original order may have been, it is clearly to be inferred, from memoranda left by the author, that he intended to recast the arrangement of topics, though without making any substantial alteration in the reasoning. Upon a rearrangement of topics, it might, perhaps, have been found advisable to print the elaborate discussion of the Dartmouth College Case as an appendix. But, so far as can be inferred from Judge Doe's memoranda, he intended that this discussion should appear as a part of the main opinion. He believed that a full understanding of the College Case is necessary to explain the history, and to determine the real scope and effect, of the customary clause reserving to the legislature power to alter, amend, or repeal corporate charters. It is not quite certain at what part of the opinion he finally intended to insert the comments upon the College Case. They are printed here (beginning on page 27), after the discussion as to the power of the majority, and before the full consideration of the effect of the reservation.</footnote_body>

Filed Date: 12/5/1886

Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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