Ladd v. Town of Franklin

37 Conn. 53
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 Conn. 53 (Ladd v. Town of Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladd v. Town of Franklin, 37 Conn. 53 (Colo. 1870).

Opinion

Phelps, J.

To determine this case let us briefly recur to the facts. The defendant, on the 26th day of July, 1862, in legal meeting, voted to pay $50 from its treasury to such resident volunteers as should thereafter, before the 1st day of September following, enlist in the service of the United States, and also to those who had previously enlisted since the 14th day of the said July ; such bounty to be paid when such recruits should be mustered into the United States service and accredited to the town; and the selectmen were appointed a committee to pay to the volunteer or his order such bounty when the foregoing conditions wore complied with, and wore authorized to borrow money if necessary to pay the same.

At another meeting duly warned and legally held on the 23d of August, 1862, it also voted to pay each resident volunteer from the town who should enlist for the term of nine months before the first day of said September, $150 in addition to the $50 previously offered, and the selectmen were directed to pay this bounty “ on and after such volunteers wore mustered into the service of the United States”; and they were required to use the utmost diligence in filling the quota then assigned to the town.

Pursuant to the votes passed at the last mentioned meeting Ezra B. Bailey, a resident of the town of Eranklin, on or about the 5th of September, 1862, volunteered for' nine months, and was examined, accepted and sworn on the 25th of that month, but in consequence of sickness ivas never mustered into the United States service and never accredited to, or applied upon the quota of the town. The regiment in which he volunteered was duly mustered into service on the 10th. of the subsequent November. The note in suit [60]*60was dated on the 26th of September, and the consideration expressed on its face is for “ nine months volunteer militia service.” It is in form negotiable, but was made so by one of the selectmen after the others had signed it, and in their absence and' without their knowledge or authority or that of the town, but the fact of such alteration was subsequently communicated by the person by whom it was añade to the other selectmen, who made no objection. On the same day the selectmen paid Bailey $35 in money, which together with the note made the entire sum voted by the town at their meeting on the 23d of August. Between February first and October first 1863 the plaintiff purchased the note fa’om Bailey, and paid him therefor its full value. The plaintiff then had knowledge of all the facts iai relation to Bailey’s service, excepting that he did not know he had not been duly mustered into the United States service. He had heard that the selectmen questioned the liability of the town to pay the note, hut had no actual knowledge that they declined payment until he saw a published notice to that effect dated October 12th, 1863, which cautioned all persons against purchasing the note, and stated that payment of it had been stopped because the service by Bailey, specified as the consideration for the note, had not been performed. The court found that neither Bailey nor the plaintiff knew that the former had not been applied towards the quota of the town, unless such knowledge is properly inferable from the time and manner of Bailey’s service; and that the plaintiff took the note in good faith excepting as the contrary is indicated by the other acts found. It is conceded that the plaintiff was a resident of the town of Franklin at the time of the passage of the votes, and had knowledge of them.

In view of the character of the votes, and of the facts found and admitted, and the law as applicable to them, we are to say whether the Superior Court properly found the issue in favor of the plaintiff.

It is claimed in support of the motion for a new trial, that the selectmen were the special agents of the town, and exceeded their authority in giving the note in suit. We think [61]*61a fair construction of the votes passed by the defendant justifies fids claim. They were appointed and authorized to execute the single and specific purpose of filling the then pending quota ot the town, and of paying the volunteers when they should be mustered into the service of the United States. So far as the authority to make payment was concerned it was carefully and expressly limited as to the time when it might be performed. The object of the defendant was to fill its quota, and its motive for procuring volunteer enlistments was to secure the application of the recruits upon it. This could not be done until they were actually m'ustered in, and hence the obvious purpose and propriety of the defendant's action in this respect. The circumstances are such as to exclude all possible doubt of its intention, even if it had not been unequivocally expressed in the language which it used. The fact that the selectmen so understood it is shown by their subsequent conduct in attempting to discharge the defendant from liability upon it. The notice which they published was in effect an admission that they had prematurely and unauthorizedly executed the note.

If Bailey had been actually mustered in he would have been accredited to the defendant and counted towards its quota, even though he had immediately deserted and never rendered any part ot the service which he promised to perform. Terrell v. Town of Colebrook, 35 Conn., 188. The pivot of the whole matter was the being mustered into the service of the United States. If this had been done every requisite essential to the defendant would have been complied with, and not having been done, the consideration failed and the entire anterior proceedings were practically an utter nullity.

| The duty of filling quotas by towns was special and extraordinary, and grew out of the exigencies created by the existence of the war. The discharge of this duty appertained to the towns in their corporate and aggregate capacity, and not to their selectmen as their ordinary general agents, except as they were specially directed or empowered', j Even the towns themselves had no authority to pay bounties until it [62]*62was expressly conferred upon them by the General Assembly in 1862. It was a peculiar power, to be strictly exercised, and one which the selectmen could not legally perform except within the limits and' according to the terms distinctly authorized by the towns. The defendant evidently understood this to be so, and acted intelligently upon that understanding. It was precise in the declaration of the terms of its authority, and careful not to hold out its agents as possessing any power except what was expressly contained in its public and-recorded votes. The scope of the agency was restricted to the discharge of a particular duty, and, so far as the act of making payment was concerned, to a certain time; and it is difficult to conceive how language could have been more aptly employed to create a special, as distinguished from a general agency. Story on Agency, §§ 73, 126, 127, 128, and notes; Chitty on Contracts, 216, note; 2 Kent’s Com., 620 to 622 and notes; Thompson v. Stewart, 3 Conn., 188; Keyes v. Westford, 17 Pick., 273; Delafield v. State of Illinois, 26 Wend., 192; Beals v. Allen, 18 Johns., 363.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Conn. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-town-of-franklin-conn-1870.