Hart v. Inhabitants of Holden

55 Me. 572
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Me. 572 (Hart v. Inhabitants of Holden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. Inhabitants of Holden, 55 Me. 572 (Me. 1868).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover in this action the sum of three hundred dollars, to which he says he is entitled by virtue of a vote of the town, passed January 14, 1865, and of his enlistment to fill the town’s quota under the call for troops, made by the President of the United States, December 19, 1864, for which sum he received from the selectmen a town order dated Feb. 15, 1865, which is offered in evidence in support of a count for money had and received, and a special count upon the order itself.

The vote relied upon is as follows: — "Voted to raise three hundred dollars for each man who volunteers for one year, to fill the town’s quota under the present call for jnen.”

[574]*574Testimony was offered by the plaintiff to prove that, after the town had been notified to fill their quota under this call, the selectmen, who were acting for the town in that matter, on the 6th of January, 1865, being the day on which they issued the warrant for the meeting of Jan. 14, urged the plaintiff to enlist upon the quota, assuring him, and, in behalf of the town, promising him, that, if he would do so, he should receive the same bounty from the town which those subsequently enlisting might be entitled to, under the vote of the town at the approaching meeting; that, relying upon this promise of the selectmen, he enlisted on the same day, January 6, and was duly accepted and credited on the town’s quota, which was filled by subsequent enlistments, the plaintiff being counted as one; that he was assigned to the coast guard service, and actually served as a soldier in the army until, honorably discharged in July, 1865.

On the 15th Feb., 1865, the town clerk who recorded the vote above recited, being also one of the selectmen at whose solicitation the plaintiff had enlisted, made to the plaintiff the town order for $300.

At a subsequent meeting of the town, held March 13, 1865, in pursuance of an article inserted in the warrant "to see if the town will so amend the vote passed at their meeting January 14, for paying bounties to volunteers, as to exclude those men who have enlisted in the coast guards from this town from receiving the bounty then voted, or pass any vote relating to paying bounties to volunteers for the coast guards,” it was " voted to pay men who have gone into the coast guard from this town the sum of one hundred dollars bounty if they remain in this State ; if they are called out to the front, a bounty of three hundred dollars.”

On the part of thó defendants, it is objected that there was no legal notice of the townmeeting. But there is nothing before us in this report upon which this objection can properly be sustained. The returns upon the warrants are not made part of the case. Copies of only so much of the warrants and of such votes as relate to the claim in suit [575]*575are called for. These portions of the record seem to have been put in at nisi prius without objection, or notice to plaintiff that any question was made as to the legality of the meeting. Under such circumstances, the defendants are not at liberty upon this hearing to dispute the legality of the meeting. The report professedly embraces only portions of the record, and these portions having been received without objection, the presumption is that the transactions therein recited occurred at a legal meeting of the town.

It is further objected that the plaintiff, having enlisted previous to the meeting, is not comprehended within the terms of the vote, and the case of Alley v. Edgecomb, 53 Maine, 446, is cited. There are radical distinctions between that case and the present which must not be overlooked. There, the claimant of the bounty had enlisted months previous to the issuing of the call — in the navy, where he might gain prize money, and while his name, in conformity wdth the regulations of the service, was credited to the town, thus reducing the number of men they were called upon to furnish on that quota, the vote of the town passed long after-wards to raise money "sufficient to fill the town’s quota provided they can be procured for $300 per man,” manifestly contemplated a prospective procurement only, and could not, by any reasonable construction, be made to include the plaintiff in that suit. But w'here, as here, the vote is " to raise three hundred dollars for each man who volunteers to fill the town’s quota, under the present call for men,” there is nothing in the terms of the vote to exclude, from a participation in its benefits, one who did thus volunteer upon that quota under that call, although he enlisted a few days previous to the actual passage of the vote.

Throughout the l’ebellion, as soon as the calls for more troops were issued, efforts were made to procure recruits, anticipating the action of the towns and a future legislative ratification and confirmation of their acts and doings; and very many promptly and cheerfully responded to the call, renouncing profitable employments in civil life, relying upon [576]*576the patriotic liberality of their townsmen, whose votes wore commonly so framed as to place on equal footing all who volunteered on the same quota, under the same call, without regard to the precise date of their enlistment, or whether it was before or after the day of the meeting.

Such, we think, is the true intent and construction of this vote. Like construction and effect were given to a vote not materially different in Gale v. Jamaica, 39 Vt., 611.

Grammatical precision and verbal accuracy are not to be expected in the records of the proceedings of town meetings ; and the want of them vitiates nothing, provided the true intent can be fairly ascertained, looking at the record in the light afforded by a knowledge of " the purpose, occasion and circumstances of the proceedings.” See remarks of Barrett, J., in Pottle v. Maidstone, 39 Vt., 72.

But it is further urged in defence that the vote constituted no contract, — implied none, — that there was no consideration, an essential element in a valid contract. It can hardly be necessary to remark that these cases differ in various respects from ordinary cases of contract.

Towns were under no obligation to provide for the public defence, had no power to take measures for that purpose, or to bind themselves by any promises or undertakings relating thereto. So that in the outset there was but one party capable of making a contract relative to that subject matter, and, from the very nature of the case, there was no possibility of a consideration moving from the volunteer or drafted man to the corporation whose promises he seeks to enforce. Eor, as corporations, they had neither rights nor duties in the premises. The mass of our citizens, being individually sensible of the duty which they owed to the country, made use of their municipal organizations to assure to those who took the field, either as volunteers or drafted men, or as substitutes for drafted or enrolled men, something beyond and above the low rate of pay which was felt to be altogether inadequate considering the hardships and hazards of the service. In most cases, the assurance when made was with[577]*577out legal force or effect, for want of.

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55 Me. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-inhabitants-of-holden-me-1868.