It appears from the case that all the commissioners Avere present at the hearing, that they agreed to lay out the highway, and actually laid it out, estimated the expense of making it, assessed the damages to land owners, apportioned the cost of making the highway among the towns interested, and ascertained and settled the costs, and nothing remained to be done but to put the results in form in the shape of a report, and return to the town clerk of Farmington a certificate of the land damages. It appears also that they had made all the necessary minutes for making of their report except the certificate of land damages. After all this was done before the report Avas made and the certificate returned, the chairman of the board removed from the county, and the question is, whether a report made and signed after that, is valid.
All were present at the hearing, and all agreed to the matters to be reported, and under such circumstances we think that a report signed by the two remaining commissioners would have been good if the chairman had remained in office, and refused to sign it. By the Revised Statutes, ch. 1, § 13, it is provided that words purporting to give a joint authority to three or more public officers, shall give such authority to a majority of them, unless otherwise specially declared. At common la\v where an authority of a publie nature is delegated by law to several persons, and they meet to consider and execute it, a majority may decide. Farwell’s petition, 2 *121N. H., 124 ; Petition of Nashua, 12 N. H., 428 ; Palmer v. Conway, 22 N. H., 148; Butler v. Washburn, 25 N. H., 256; Glidden v. Towle, 31 N. H., 165; Grindley & a. v. Barker, 1 B. & P., 228.
Even if the statute goes no farther than the common law rule, a report signed by the majority under the circumstances of this case, would have been good. According to the case of Grindley & a. v. Barker, 1 B. & P., 228, before cited, it would have been deemed to be the report of the whole. The real point of the objection is, that at the time when the report was signed, there was a vacancy in the board of commissioners caused by the removal of the chairman from the county; and, the general doctrine that in case there be a vacancy in the board, the remaining members cannot act, seems to be unquestionable. Palmer v. Conway, 22 N. H., 148; Mitchell v. Holderness, 34 N. H., 209, 214.
The question here, then, is whether this doctrine applies where at the time the vacancy occurred nothing remained to be done but to reduce to writing, and made the formal report of what had already been determined by the whole board.
In Palmer v. Conway, before cited, it was held that as there were not three members of the board in office at the time, there was no such board as the statute requires, and therefore there could be no action of the majority. In that case, a report laying out a highway had been recommitted to the same board, and a hearing notified, and before the time appointed, one of the commissioners died, but the others went on with the hearing and made several changes in the report; and upon the report being again recommitted, the same two commissioners made further changes ; and the report upon full consideration was set aside for want of authority in those commissioners to act. In Mitchell v. Holderness, before cited, the full board had decided to lay out a road, and made known their decision, and thereupon a motion was made that the town of Plymouth be required to contribute to the expense of making the road, and as one of the commissioners lived in Plymouth, another was appointed in his place; afterwards another member of the board removed from the state, and the petitioners thereupon moved the court, to declare his office vacant, and appoint another in his stead, but the motion was denied; and upon exceptions to the supreme court, this ruling was held to be wrong. The court held, that while unfinished business was pending before the board, it became the duty of the court to pronounce the office vacant, and to fill the vacancy under the statute. The court say that they do not understand that because a board of commissioner’s have decided to ■ lay out a road, and then proceed to inquire whether other towns should defray part of the expense, they may not upon further investigation, reconsider their original intention to lay the road. That the statute contemplates but one report, and until that is made to the court, commissioners may change it if they think proper. The petition of Nashua, 12 N. H. 425, was for leave to discontinue a highway, and commissioners to whom it was referred, reported in favor of the discontinuance; but as one of the commis*122sioners -was a resident of Nashua, the report was rejected; the court holding that a majority could not act, unless the matter was heard and considered by a full board, all of whom were competent to act.
In the case before us, the duties of the commissioners were not fully complied with, when the chairman of the board removed from the county. It is true, that nothing remained to be done but to reduce to writing, and make report of what they had already done and decided; and yet until such report was actually made, the commissioners were at full liberty to modify, or reverse, entirely the decisions they had made. If nothing remained to be done, but some merely ministerial act, then the case might be different; but as it is, we feel obliged, somewhat reluctantly, to hold that the duties remaining to be performed, were substantial in their character, and could not be performed by the two remaining commissioners, after the chairman had vacated his office.
The doctrine of Mitchell v. Holderness, goes very far in the direction of the views we have expressed; holding that until the report was made, the commissioners may make such changes as they think proper, notwithstanding they had before the vacancy, decided to lay out the road. There are serious inconveniences, we are aware, in this view of the law, and the present case affords an illustration of them, inasmuch as the appointment of a new commissioner, might make it necessary to go through with the investigation again; and so-it was understood in Mitchell v. Holderness. Unless, however, we overthrow the doctrine of the cases cited, that if there is a vacancy in the board, the two remaining members cannot act, we must hold here, that if a vacancy was caused by the removal of the chairman, the others could not make a report. No solid distinction, we think, can be made between the case of Mitchell v. Holderness and the present case, so far as respects this point; and when .the rule is once understood, there will be no serious practical difficulty.
The question then remaining is, whether by the removal of one of the commissioners from the county, a vacancy in the board is ipso facto created, without a declaration by the court, that the office is vacant.
The statute of July, 1855, sec. 38, provides that if any juror ehosen commissioner, declines to accept, removes from the county, resigns, dies, or becomes insane, or when there is manifest hazard to the public interest, the majority of the judges of the supreme judicial court may declare the office vacant; and in case of vacancy from any cause, the supreme judicial court shall appoint a commissioner to fill it; and it further provides that if any commissioner shall be interested in any petition relating to roads, he shall not serve, but the vacancy shall be filled by any justice of the court of' common pleas, or the supreme judicial court, either in term time, or in -vacation,. Similar provisions are found in the General Statutes, ch. 23, § 7 & 8. In behalf of the petitionees, the defendants, it is urged that the office becomes vacant in the cases enumerated, without any declaration to that effect. That in case of death, it must be so ; *123and, therefore, it may fairly be inferred, that the same was intended in case of a removal from the county. It will be perceived, however, that those cases are associated with another, namely, ‘ ‘ when there is a manifest hazard to the public interest,” which necessarily calls for such a declaration, before the office becomes vacant. In some of the cases enumerated, it is obvious that the offices must become vacant without airy action by the supreme court, as by death or resignation. In others, a declaration would be necessary as in case of “ manifest hazard to the public interest,” and insanity, probably; and we are inclined to regard this provision, not as furnishing the only and exclusive method of determining when an office is vacant, but as exclusive only, when from the nature of the case, an inquiry of a judicial character and a declaration of the result were necessary before a vacancy could be said to exist.
In respect to the effect of a removal from the county, it might be plausibly urged that questions of domicil are often intricate and difficult, and that until passed upon by the tribunal designated, the office should not be regarded as vacant. We think, however, that the drift of the cases in New Hampshire, bearing upon this subject, is the other way.
In Giles v. School District, 31 N. H. 308, it was held, that the office of prudential committee becomes vacant, by the removal of the incumbent from the town — citing Barre v. Greenwich, 1 Pick. 134. In several settlement cases, when the incumbents of town offices had removed from town before the expiration of the year, it was held that they did not gain settlements, by serving in town offices one year. Acworth v. Lyndeborough, 2 N. H. 295, where it was held that the removal of the highway surveyor within the year, was ipso facto, a resignation of his office.
A similar doctrine was held in Rumney v. Campton, 10 N. H. 569. In these cases, there was no statute looking to any declaration by the court, but the question of removal was in issue like any other fact.
In Bartlett v. Jenkins, 22 N. H. 61, the ensign of a military company had removed without the limits of his company, and it was held that it was not necessary to consult him in the appointment of a subordinate, upon the ground that after his removal, he could not properly perform an official act, notwithstanding the provision of the statute wasy that if any officer shall remove without such limits to reside, it shall be sufficient cause for an address for his removal from office ; and it was urged that the officer had not been removed, but the court hold that it is contrary to the spirit of the law requiring officers to reside within those limits, to permit them to perform all the functions of their rank, after their change of residence. In the petition of Nashua, 12 N. H. 425, before cited, the report of the commissioners was rejected, because one of them was interested, being a citizen of Nashua.
These cases, with the exception of Butler v. Jenkins, are not directly in point, but they serve to show, that in determining the *124validity of acts by persons assuming to be public officers, the courts of this state are accustomed to pass upon the effect of a removal of the officer out of the prescribed limits. In Butler v. Jenkins, the terms looking to the action of the appropriate tribunal, before the office shall be deemed to be vacant, are stronger than in the case of county commissioners, and yet the authority of the officer removing out of the limits of his company, was held to have ceased, without an address for his. removal.
Upon the whole, we think that by the removal of the chairman from the county, his office, ipso facto, became vacant, and the others had no power to complete the proceedings, by the making of a report.
We should have been glad, to have found some satisfactory ground on which the report could have been sustained, but have been unable to do so. What remained to be done, was of a substantial character; and should the report now be sustained, it would be difficult to fix any limits beyond which the majority of the board could not go, after the office of one member had become vacant.
It is best, we think, that it be understood that the business must be fully completed, while the board of commissioners is full. That rule, has the advantage of simplicity, and if observed, will avoid much uncertainty and inconvenience.
Exceptions sustained.