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Opinion of the Justices

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Request of Governor and Council
Aug 29, 1962
183 A.2d 909 (N.H. 1962)

Opinion

No. 5084.

Submitted August 24, 1962.

Answer returned August 29, 1962.

1. The fact that the chairman of the State Board of Education had been a member of a municipal business development corporation and was a stockholder, officer or attorney for certain public utilities did not as a matter of law constitute such a conflict of interest as to render invalid his vote as a member of the State Board of Education upon the location of a site for a state technical institute (RSA ch. 188-A (supp)) in the absence of a prohibiting statute. 2. Nor did the fact that the State Board of Education sought the recommendation as to the location of a site for the technical institute from the Advisory Committee, established (RSA 188-A:7 (supp)) to aid the Board in the administration and programming of the institute, render the action of the Board in its selection of a site invalid. 3. The fact that a hearing had been ordered on the merits of a petition pending before the Superior Court seeking injunctive relief against the Governor and Council was held in the circumstances of the case to have no bearing upon the authority of the Governor and Council under RSA 4:29 and RSA ch. 188-A (supp) to carry out a vote of the State Board of Education by proceeding to acquire land for the site of a technical institute when requested by said Board. 4. In so holding the justices assumed that the facts stated by the petition to the Superior Court were true and that in denying a temporary injunction the Superior Court had made the same assumption.


The following resolution adopted by the Governor and Council on August 15, 1962, was filed in this court on August 16, 1962:

"WHEREAS, the State Board of Education under RSA 188-A:2 as inserted by L. 1961, 267, is authorized and directed to establish one technical institute centrally located in this state; and

"WHEREAS, the State Board of Education has selected a site in the City of Concord known as Fort Eddy land for the location of the said technical institute; and

"WHEREAS, prior to making the selection of said Concord site the State Board of Education requested the recommendation of the Advisory Committee established by RSA 188-A:7 as inserted by L. 1961, 267; and

"WHEREAS, the said Advisory Committee recommended to the State Board of Education that the Fort Eddy land in the City of Concord be acquired for the technical institute; and

"WHEREAS, the chairman of the State Board of Education was chairman of the Concord Regional Development Corporation during part of the time the location of a site for a technical institute was under consideration by the State Board of Education (copy of the purposes of said corporation are attached hereto); and

"WHEREAS, the chairman of the State Board of Education is also the President and Director of the Concord Electric Company; and

"WHEREAS, the City of Manchester, through its City Solicitor, on August 14, 1962 filed in Superior Court for Merrimack County a petition to enjoin the Governor and Council from further action in the acquisition of said land; and

"WHEREAS, the Superior Court of Merrimack County by order of Judge George R. Grant, Jr. dated August 14, 1962 has made the following order:

`The Court feels that there is no necessity for an ex parte hearing at this time. The validity of the votes of the Board of Education establishing a site for the technical institute will be determined by a full hearing on the merits.' and;

"WHEREAS, the Governor and Council under RSA 4:29 may acquire on behalf of the State by purchase or otherwise any real estate within the state for public buildings and this land must be acquired under RSA 4:29; and

"WHEREAS, the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Council, is authorized to draw his warrant in payment for land so acquired upon moneys appropriated for such purposes in accordance with RSA 4:38; and

"WHEREAS, a special appropriation is provided for the acquisition under L. 1961, 267:4; and

"WHEREAS, in view of the circumstances we are in doubt as to our power to acquire the real estate and approve the payment for said acquisition;

"Now, Therefore, Be it

"RESOLVED, by the Governor and Council assembled in Executive Session, that the Justices of the Supreme Court be respectfully requested under the provisions of Part 2, Article 74 of the Constitution of the State of New Hampshire to give their opinion upon the following important questions of law:

"1. Does the fact that the chairman of the State Board of Education was holding the positions outlined above in private corporations affect the legality of his vote as such chairman of the State Board of Education in the selection of said site?

"2. Does the fact that recommendations were requested of the Advisory Committee thereby render the action of the State Board of Education in the selection of the site invalid?

"3. Does the fact that injunctive relief has been asked and a hearing on the merits has been ordered but no date has been set, have any bearing on the authority of the Governor and Council to proceed to acquire the land in question as duly authorized by RSA 4:29 and RSA 188-A?"

The following answer was returned:

To his Excellency the Governor and the Honorable Council:

The undersigned Justices of the Supreme Court submit the following answers to the questions contained in your resolution of August 15, 1962 concerning the validity of the action taken by the State Board of Education in selecting a site for the Technical Institute in the city of Concord. The State Board of Education was authorized and directed to establish one technical institute "to be centrally located where in the opinion of the board it will serve most advantageously the purpose of this chapter." RSA 188-A:2 (supp); Laws 1961, 267:1. The purpose of this act is to "finance facilities for the preparation of youth and adults for productive employment as technicians and skillful workers . . ." to promote the general economy of the state. RSA 188-A:1 (supp); Laws 1961, 267:1.

The nub of the first question transferred to this court by the Governor and Council is whether the vote of the chairman of the State Board of Education for the Concord site is illegal because of a conflict of interests. For the purposes of answering this question we accept as true the allegations of fact contained in the resolution of the Governor and Council supplemented by the allegations in the petition for injunction in the Superior Court as set forth in the brief for the city of Manchester on which petition a temporary injunction was denied. From these sources and from undisputed facts contained in briefs filed in this proceeding, the following is a summary of the offices and positions held by the chairman of the State Board of Education. He is an officer, director, stockholder and attorney for the Concord Electric Company, and attorney for the Public Service Company in Manchester and the Pennichuck Water Works in Nashua — all regulated public utilities in this state. He is a stockholder and was an officer of the Concord Regional Development Corporation, a corporation similar to many others in various parts of the state. He is also director of various other corporations doing business in the state as are presumably other members of the State Board of Education and the Advisory Committee appointed under RSA 188-A:7 (supp); Laws 1961, 267:1.

Acceptance of appointment to the State Board of Education is and for many years has been regarded as performance of a civic duty and it has been customary to appoint men and women who are also engaged in many private, public and charitable activities. They "serve without pay" and the statute specifically provides that they "shall not be technical educators nor professionally engaged in school work." RSA 186:1. There is no command in the educational laws of this state which provides that members of the State Board of Education shall be business hermits or that they must be isolated from all other professional and public duties in order to serve on the board. Although the Legislature has considered a "conflict of interest" statute, it has passed no general legislation in this field. Cf. RSA 95:1. Specific prohibitions have been employed in isolated instances such as the statute forbidding a judge to be "an officer in any railroad corporation in this state" (RSA 492:2) but there is no general statute on the subject. See Eisenberg, Conflicts of Interest Situations and Remedies, 13 Rutgers L. Rev. 666 (1959); Kaplan Lillich, Municipal Conflicts of Interests: Inconsistencies and Patchwork Prohibitions, 58 Colum. L. Rev. 157 (1958). Most of the statutory activity in this field has been on the federal level. Note, The Federal Conflicts of Interests Statutes and the Fiduciary Principle, 14 Vand. L. Rev. 1485, 1507 (1961); United States v. Mississippi Valley Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520.

There is a conflict of interest when a public officer votes on a matter in which he has a direct personal and pecuniary interest. Rider v. Portsmouth, 67 N.H. 298, 299; Rollins v. Connor, 74 N.H. 456. The fact that the chairman of the State Board of Education was a stockholder, officer or attorney for public utilities which may sell additional electricity to the tax-exempt and state-supported technical institute is too attenuated and unsubstantial a factor to raise a conflict of interest in this case. See Opinion of the Justices, 75 N.H. 613. Nor was his vote illegal because he was connected with the Concord Regional Development Corporation any more than were the votes of other members of the Board for a location and site in their respective cities or areas. Annot. 133 A.L.R. 1257, 1267; Note, Conflict of Interests: State Government Employees, 47 Va. L. Rev. 1034, 1035, 1045 (1961). See Conflict of Interest and Federal Service (Association of the Bar of the City of New York, 1960) 314.

We conclude that the positions held by the chairman of the State Board of Education did not affect the legality of his vote in the selection of the site for the Technical Institute and the answer to the first question is no. Opinion of the Justices, 75 N.H. 613.

The second question reads as follows: "Does the fact that recommendations were requested of the Advisory Committee thereby render the action of the State Board of Education in the selection of the site invalid?" The Advisory Committee was established to aid the State Board of Education in the ". . . administration and programming of the technical institute . . ." for the purpose (in the words of the statute) of "assuring expert participation by management, labor, business and education." RSA 188-A:7 (supp); Laws 1961, 267:1. While the recommendation of the Committee as to the selection of a site was not a matter specifically delegated to it by the statute, the Board was free to seek the services of the Advisory Committee in the manner in which it did. The Board was expected to obtain information and advice from all sources and this included the Advisory Committee. The answer to the second question is no.

The third question reads as follows: "Does the fact that injunctive relief has been asked and a hearing on the merits has been ordered but no date has been set, have any bearing on the authority of the Governor and Council to proceed to acquire the land in question as duly authorized by RSA 4:29 and RSA 188-A?" Our answer is "no under the circumstances of this case." So far as we can determine the Superior Court denied the petition for temporary injunctive relief on the assumption that the facts stated in the petition were true. We have made the same assumption in deciding that the vote of the chairman of the State Board of Education was not illegal. Thus, on the present state of the record before us, the Governor and Council, when requested by the State Board of Education has authority to proceed to carry out a vote of the Board under RSA 4:29 and RSA ch. 188-A (supp).

In answering these questions we cannot and do not express any opinion on the desirability, expediency or wisdom of the choice of a location and site for the Technical Institute. That is not a judicial function or duty.

FRANK R. KENISON. LAURENCE I. DUNCAN. AMOS N. BLANDIN, JR. EDWARD J. LAMPRON. STEPHEN M. WHEELER.

August 29, 1962.

William Maynard, Attorney General, Elmer T. Bourque, Deputy Attorney General and William F. Cann, Assistant Attorney General furnished a memorandum.

Memoranda were also furnished by J. Francis Roche, city solicitor of Manchester, Daniel E. Donovan, Jr., city solicitor of Concord, John C. Mongan, mayor of Manchester, Mario J. Vagge, mayor of Nashua, E. O. Foss, secretary Nottingham Planning Board, Alfred D. Rosenblatt and by other members of the public.


Summaries of

Opinion of the Justices

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Request of Governor and Council
Aug 29, 1962
183 A.2d 909 (N.H. 1962)
Case details for

Opinion of the Justices

Case Details

Full title:OPINION OF THE JUSTICES

Court:Supreme Court of New Hampshire Request of Governor and Council

Date published: Aug 29, 1962

Citations

183 A.2d 909 (N.H. 1962)
183 A.2d 909

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