Jackman v. Town of New Haven

42 Vt. 591
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Vt. 591 (Jackman v. Town of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackman v. Town of New Haven, 42 Vt. 591 (Vt. 1870).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wilson, J.

The quota of the town of New Haven, under the call of October 17, 1803, was seventeen men. The town, at the meeting of December 12,1863, regularly voted “ that a bounty of $400 be paid to each one who might enlist to serve as a soldier in- the army of the United States to fill the balance of the quota of this town under the (said) present call for volunteers.” At the time of said vote, no part of said quota had been filled. The defendants, by their selectmen, after said 12th day of December, and before the 14th day of that month, enlisted a sufficient number of men to fill said quota, and intended to have them mustered into the service to the credit of the town on said quota. On the 15th day of said December the plaintiff, then serving with his regiment at Brandy Station, Virginia, was informed that the defendant town was paying $400 bounty for.men under said call, and the plaintiff on that day, relying on the information as before stated, and expecting to receive a bounty of $400, re-enlisted and caused himself to be placed to the credit of said town. He caused notice to be given by one Sneden, to one of the selectmen of New Haven, on the 20th of said December, of said re-enlistment, and that he expected the bounty, to which notice the selectman replied that the plaintiff came too late as he thought their quota was full. No officer or agent of the town had any knowledge or notice that there was such a man as the plaintiff, or that he or any other man in the “ field ” had enlisted or proposed to enlist to their credit, until the notice was given by Sneden on the 20th of that month, as above stated. The plaintiff was, on the 24th day of December, [594]*5941863, mustered into the service to the credit of said town, but the muster was dated back to the 16th. On or before the 5th day of January, 1864, all the men so enlisted by the defendants were conveyed to Brattleboro, to the United States rendezvous, and placed under the charge of the United States authorities, and were all mustered into the service. The actual date of the muster-in of each is as follows, viz.: two of them December 14; two December 18; one December 22, and three December 29, 1863; two January 6, and the other seven January 22,1864. It appears that only five of the seventeen, men, enlisted by the procurement of the defendant town, were actually mustered into the service before the plaintiff’s muster-in. Besides the plaintiff there were nine other men who rc-enlisted in the field, to the credit of said town ; seven of them were mustered into the service December 16, and the other two December 22, 1863, from all which it appears that of the seventeen men necessary to fill that quota, only fourteen of them were mustered into the service before the plaintiff’s muster in. Upon the uncontradicted evidence in the case, we think the plaintiff is entitled to recover.

There was a contract with any one who performed the conditions of the vote. The vote constitutes a general and direct offer from the town to pay a bounty of 1400 to each one who should enlist to serve as a soldier in the army of the United States, to fill the balance of the town’s quota under that call. 24 E. C. L , 127; Gale v. Jamaica, 39 Vt., 610 ; Steinberg v. Eden, 41 Vt., 187; Hill v. Eden, 41 Vt., 195. To accept this offer of the town no contract with or assent of the selectmen was necessary. The plaintiff could bring himself within the provisions of the town vote by re-enlisting and applying his name upon the balance of the town’s quota under that call, and being mustered in, while the offer remained open -as between him and the defendants. The vote was as much a general and direct offer from the town to the plaintiff, who enlisted in the field without the knowledge of the selectmen, as it was to those enlisted by them. It appears that twenty-seven men undertook to accept the offer of the town, and they all went so far towards bringing themselves within the terms of the vote as to enlist to the defendants’ credit before their quota, [595]*595under that call, was filled, the plaintiff being the eighteenth man who enlisted while the quota remained open. But neither of them, could apply upon any quota until he had been accepted by the government and duly mustered into the United States’ service. While the plaintiff was engaged in actual service, he re-enlisted, and placed his name to the credit of the defendants, upon that quota. He continued in said service, and was in actual service before and at the time of his muster-in upon his reenlistment contract. The government allowed the plaintiff to re-enlist, and became a party to his re-enlistment contract, by which the government accepted the plaintiff as a suitable person to perform the service which the contract called for, and from that time he was a soldier in the army of the United States, and nothing ( except his muster-in ) remained to be done after his re-enlistment to entitle him to appty upon the quota of the defendant town. The plaintiff’s muster-in, on the 24th of December, as of the 16th of that month, if antedated by authority, would show that the government understood the plaintiff should have been mustered on the 16th, and that the delay of his muster till the 24th, was not in consequence of any fault of the plaintiff. We have no occasion to decide whether the plaintiff had, by his reenlistment and continuance in the service, before his muster-in, so far perfected his re-enlistment contract as to entitle him to have his muster-in, if it took place within a reasonable time after his re-enlistment, relate back to the date of his. re-enlistment, or to the 16th of that month, as between the plaintiff and the defendant town, in respect to the general offer of the latter, so that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover the bounty, even if the recruits furnished by the selectmen had been mustered in before the muster-in of the plaintiff. At the time the plaintiff re-enlisted, only two of the seventeen men' previously enlisted by the procurement of the selectmen had perfected their enlistment contracts. The other fifteen men were not in the service at the time they enlisted. They had not been accepted by the government, and could claim no right, under the vote, as against the plaintiff, by reason of the priority of their enlistment. The fact that the selectmen had previously enlisted a sufficient number of men to fill the quota, [596]*596but whose enlistment contracts had not been perfected, can not prejudice the plaintiff. The selectmen were, at that time, recruiting officers in their respective towns, and it was their duty to aid in procuring enlistments, but no action on the part of the defendants’ selectmen, either as recruiting officers or as agents of the town, was necessary to give validity to such general and direct offer from the town of a bounty. It is plain, from the language of the vote, that the town did not intend to restrict payment of a bounty to such only as should, by the procurement or assent of the selectmen, enlist and be mustered in this state, but did intend to pay a bounty to each man who should comply with the terms of the- vote, whether his enlistment contract should be perfected in this state or in the “ field,” with or without the knowledge of the defendants, if perfected before the quota was filled. The plaintiff was the fifteenth man mustered in to the defendants’ credit, to apply upon that quota, and his muster-in was while the offer and quota remained open.

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Related

Bucklin v. Town of Sudbury
43 Vt. 700 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Vt. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackman-v-town-of-new-haven-vt-1870.