DISQUALIFICATION
Conflicts of interest and the "Juror Standard" RSA 500-A:12
- Disqualification
is appropriate where a member has a direct personal or pecuniary interest in
the outcome of a case that differs from the interest of other citizens or where
the member would otherwise be disqualified as a juror. RSA 673:14
- The "Juror Standard"
(RSA 500-A: 12) calls for disqualification where the member
- (a) Expects to gain or lose upon the disposition of the case;
- (b) Is related to either party;
- (c) Has advised or assisted either party;
- (d) Has directly or indirectly given his opinion or has formed an opinion;
- (e) Is employed by or employs any party in the case;
- (f) Is prejudiced to any degree regarding the case; or
- (g) Employs any of the counsel appearing in the case in any action then pending in the
court.
- Common
sense should prevail, and the likelihood of a peripheral conflict is much
higher with board members than it is with potential jurors. In McLaughlin v.
Union Leader Corp., 99 NH 492 (1955), the Supreme Court held that
is not any and every business relation that disqualifies a juror and if it did the newspaper subscriber, the telephone
user, the electric and water consumer and those who engage in a host of other
common everyday habits of ordinary commercial and domestic life would be
eliminated from the average jury panel.
- Unlike
true jurors, disqualification of a board member is a voluntary act, except that
members who are abutters are automatically disqualified. In Totty v. Grantham,
120 NH 388 (1980), the Supreme Court held
the fact of being an abutter
is sufficient to disqualify a board member from voting without a showing of
actual prejudice.
- A non-binding vote may be taken at the request of the member or any other board
member, prior to any public hearing.
- If you think you may have a conflict, then you probably do
- Ask yourself; "Can I
be indifferent?" and respond honestly
- You
are not required to divulge the reasons for which you are disqualifying
yourself - that’s your business, and no one else’s!
- Don’t
let pride interfere with your judgment -- the alternate serving in your stead
will do a good job, too. Remember that the reputation and credibility of the
board are at stake.
"Ex-Parte Contacts"
- Outside
the board meeting, avoid discussing any case with other members, applicants,
abutters, neighbors, friends, or relatives (but it’s OK to talk with your dog
about it).
- Decisions
must be made upon personal knowledge and upon evidence presented during the
public hearing.
- If
someone buttonholes you and gives you information regarding an application, you
are obliged to reveal that information to the entire board.
- If
you should be disqualified yet participate in the board’s decision, you may
have tainted the entire decision of the board, and it can be invalidated. This
is true even if your vote did not affect the outcome. In Winslow v. Holderness,
125 NH 262 (1984), the Supreme Court determined a board’s decision void where
a newly-appointed member voted on an application after speaking in favor of it
at a public hearing prior to his appointment. The Court said that it was
impossible to weigh the influence of one member’s opinion on that of the other
members.
- "Though
a judicial or quasi-judicial act of a municipal body may be voided because of a
conflict of interest, [citations omitted] an administrative or legislative act
by such a body need not be invalidated if the conflicting interest did not
determine the outcome." Michael v. City of Rochester, 119 NH 734 (1979).
- The
ZBA almost never engages in legislative or administrative functions, but the
Planning Board faces the role annually, when zoning ordinance amendments are
proposed.
- If
you are disqualified, you may testify as a member of the public
during the public hearing, but sit in the audience. It may even be better for
you simply to leave the room while the board is deliberating the issue.
Benjamin Frost, Esq., and Clayton Mitchell, Esq., Law Lecture #3: Getting the Facts Straight, NHMA Law Lecture Series, Fall 1999
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