Hall v. . Lauderdale

46 N.Y. 70
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 70 (Hall v. . Lauderdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. . Lauderdale, 46 N.Y. 70 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The board of supervisors of Livingston county, acting under the authority, conferred by the twenty-second section, of chapter eight, of the Laws of 1864, provided by resolution for raising money on the credit of the county, to fill the quota of the county, under the call of the president of the United States for volunteers, of July 18, 1864.

The county assumed, in its corporate capacity, to provide the means to raise by voluntary enlistment, the men required to meet the demand of the general government, and thereby avert the necessity of a conscription.

That this was the nature of the proceedings, taken by the board of supervisors, was substantially held by this court in the case of The People v. The Board of Supervisors of Livingston County (34 N. Y., 516).

The authority given by the twenty-second section of the act of 1864 was, to raise, money on the credit of the county, for the use of the county, and for the purpose of paying bounties to volunteers into the military and naval service of the United States, during the existence of the war, and for the purpose of paying the incidental expenses of such volunteering, etc.”

*72 The act is silent, in respect to the means to he used by the supervisors to procure enlistments; and as to the methods by which the ultimate object in view should be secured.

The money, when raised, was to be used for the purposes indicated in the act; and in the absence of any direction in the statute, it devolved by necessary inference, upon the board of supervisors, to adopt such means and constitute such agencies, to accomplish the purposes of the act, as they might deem appropriate.

The resolution of August 3, 1864, passed by the board of supervisors of Livingston county, constituted each supervisor, “recruiting and disbursing agent for his respective town; ” . and authorized him to draw from the treasury of the county^, a sum sufficient to pay the bounties, and expenses fixed by the resolution, in procuring volunteers to fill the assigned quota.

The defendant accepted this agency for the town of Geneseo, of which he was supervisor, and employed the plaintiff to assist in procuring volunteers, to be credited to the town, upon an agreement to pay him the sum of twenty-five dollars for each man, to the number of twenty-five, whose enlistment should be secured by him.

It is claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff, that the defendant was not authorized by the terms of his appointment, to bind the county by the appointment of sub-agents, or by an agreement to pay them for their services.

The compensation which the defendant was to pay the plaintiff, was within the sum which the defendant was authorized, by the resolution of the board of supervisors to pay for expenses.

The referee finds, that the agreement between the parties, was made, while the defendant was engaged in filling the quota of the town, and that “ assistance was necessary” in the prosecution of the work.

The resolution appointing the defendant, recruiting agent for the town of Geneseo, does not in terms, -authorize the employment of other persons to assist him.

*73 If an authority existed in the defendant for this purpose, it is implied from the authority given him, and from the nature of the business to which the agency related.

The appointment of an agent, in general, carries with it all powers necessary, proper and usual, to effectuate the purposes of the appointment.

The agent may use the ordinary, and appropriate means in execution of the power given to him; and they are deemed to be comprehended within the authority, although not expressed. (Story on Agency, § 97; Com. Bank v. Norton, 1 Hill, 504.)

We may take notice, as a part of the history of the time, of the circumstances attending enlistment, into the military service during the late war.

In the outset, the ranks of the army were readily recruited, and the tender of services exceeded the demand of the government.

But the extent, and frequency of the calls made, after a time diminished the number of men available for military service; and the protraction of the struggle, and the natural discouragement resulting from frequent reverses, rendered it difficult for the localities to meet the demand for additional men, under the call of July 8, 1864.

The system of bounties; the active competition between counties and towns; the desire to avoid a forced levy of men ; the urgency of the general government; all contributed to make necessary the most prompt, and effective measures on the part of the authorities to procure enlistments.

Agents appointed by the State, and by counties and towns, were sent to remote parts of the country, and the use of money, supplemented by active personal effort, was necessaiy to fill the quota demanded.

In view of the circumstances, and in the absence of restrictive words, we are of opinion that the employment of sub-agents by the defendant, to assist in the business of recruiting, was within the authority conferred upon him, and a proper and necessary means in executing it.

*74 It cannot reasonably be supposed that the defendant was expected, by personal solicitation and effort, to secure the requisite enlistment, without availing himself of the services and assistance of others.

The conclusion upon this branch of the case is, that it was within the scope of the authority conferred upon the defendant, to bind the county by a contract with the plaintiff for his services in procuring enlistments.

But it is urged by the plaintiff, in support of the judgment, that the contract was the personal contract of the defendant, and that he is personally bound to perform it.

The plaintiff, when the contract was made, had notice of ■ the resolutions of the board of supervisors, and of the official character of the defendant.

The referee finds that the defendant, in making the contract, was acting under the resolution; and the evidence leaves no room to doubt that the plaintiff so understood it.

The defendant had authority to make the contract for his principal; and, upon the facts proved, the l|iw adjudges it to be the contract of the principal.

When the agency is disclosed, and the contract relates to the matter of the agency, and is within the authority conferred, the agent will not be personally bound, unless upon clear and explicit evidence, of an intention to substitute, or. to superadd his personal liability for, or to, that of the principal. '

In case of written agreements executed by an agent, the agent is, in general, personally bound, if the instrument can have no legal operation against the principal.

But in construing oral agreements made by an agent, courts give effect to the real intention of the parties, unembarrassed by technical rules of construction; and when the act is within the authority, the presumption is, that the agent intends to bind the principal, and not himself. (Story on Ag., 261; 1 Am. Ldg. Ca., 449, note ;

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-lauderdale-ny-1871.