Larimer v. Board of Supervisors

47 Ill. 36
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Ill. 36 (Larimer v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larimer v. Board of Supervisors, 47 Ill. 36 (Ill. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by John A. Larimer, in the McLean Circuit Court, against the Board of Supervisors, to recover a bounty for re-enlisting as a volunteer in the military service, under a call by the President for troops. It appears that on the 23d day of December, 1863, the Board of Supervisors of McLean county adopted the following resolutions :

“ Resolved, That this county will pay a bounty of one hundred and fifty dollars to each volunteer from this County, who may regularly enlist in the army of the United States for the term of three years, or during the war, up to the fifth day of January next, and the sum of fifty dollars to each volunteer from this County who has so enlisted in said army since the first of September, A. D. 1862, to this date.
“ Resolved, That said bounty be limited to non-commissioned officers and privates, not to exceed 400 in all, and that it be paid to none not regularly mustered into the service of the United States, and credited to this County, and to no man who had been in said service and has not been legally and honorably discharged therefrom.”

The fourth resolution makes William Thomas, Isaac Funk and Samuel J. Reeder a committee to pay said bounty “ to all such persons as may be entitled to receive the same, as soon as they shall be satisfied that said volunteers have been regularly mustered into the service of the United States.”

These resolutions were published in one of the daily papers, in the city of Bloomington. Appellant proved that he was a resident of the county, and had previously volunteered, and remained in the service, until the 31st of December, 1863, when he was discharged at Indianola, in Texas, and, on the next day, re-enlisted in the same company and regiment in which he had previously served, and that McLean county received a credit therefor, on its quota on the call of the President of the United States for volunteers; that he remained in the service until the 24th day of ¡November, 1865, when he was regularly discharged. He testifies, that at the time of his second enlistment, he knew of the offer made by the county ; that in-March, 1864, he demanded of the agents of the county two hundred dollars, fifty on his first, and one hundred and fifty on his second enlistment. The agent refused to pay that sum, but offered to pay fifty dollars. He subsequently received the fifty dollars, but he swears with the understanding that he did not waive his claim for the remainder. That he again demanded the latter bounty, but it was refused.

It appears that appellant was not a commissioned officer, and that his re-enlistment was authorized by the regulations of the War Department ; and from the evidence of different persons, that the offer contained in the resolutions was known and spoken of publicly at the time and. place of his enlistment. It likewise appears, that his credit to the quota of McLean county was in accordance with the regulations of the War Department, and the county obtained all that was expected by the adoption of these resolutions. It also appears that the Board of Supervisors adopted a resolution on the 23d of December, 1863, that, as an act of justice, they would pay to every volunteer from the county, and who had not received a bounty from the county, the sum of fifty dollars.

It is not controverted that appellant was mustered into the service, within the time limited by the resolution, nor that the county received the credit on their quota, to fill which the bounty was offered. It is, however, said that the enlistment was not regular, as he was already in the service and his term unexpired. Even if the county could contest that question, the objection is not well taken. It appears that he was honorably discharged from the service on the 31st of December, 1863; he then owed the government no further service, and afterward, and while he had been released by the government from the performance of the remainder of his first term, he again enlisted and was mustered into the service. And it can make no difference whether he was discharged for the purpose of permitting him to re-enlist, or for other satisfactory reasons, as the county obtained the desired credit on their ' quota of the call. The government, no doubt, regarded it to the interest of the service, that veteran and experienced soldiers should be retained in the service, even at the expense of the sacrifice of a few months of the time of their former enlistment, rather than receive raw recruits; hence, the discharge, so as to enable a re-enlistment. It in nowise prejudiced the interests of the county, but the re-enlistment of appellant relieved it from furnishing another volunteer.

It is again insisted, that the county should not be bound by this enlistment, unless he had notified the agents of the county of the fact before the 5th of January, 1864. The language of the resolution is broad, and in terms requires no such notice, and it does not appear that the quota was filled at the time appellant enlisted ; and if not, what possible difference could it make to the county whether the notice had been given or not, as there is no pretense the county had, for the want of such notice, incurred liabilities to other persons, who enlisted after the quota was filled. The returns were made in the regular course of the service, and the notice was received through its regular channels, and, so far as this record discloses, without delay. And when appellant complied strictly with the offer of the county, relying upon the terms proposed, why should he be deprived of its benefits for failing to perform an act they had not prescribed, and from the omission of which they had sustained no injury, but had, on the contrary, received all of the contemplated benefits ?

It is also insisted that appellant failed to show that he received notice from the agents of the county, and therefore was not entitled to the benefit of the resolutions. The resolution requires no kind of notice, and it can not matter how he obtained his information; so he received it, accepted its terms, and acted upon it, he was entitled to its benefits. The resolution does not require a contract to be entered into with the agents of the county, but simply that persons accepting its terms, within the time, and who shall be credited to the county, shall be entitled to the bounty. Hor do we perceive any force in the objection that appellant failed to prove, that his enlistment was credited on the quota of the call for three hundred thousand men, when he enlisted pending that call, and before the quota was filled, and was regularly credited to the county, we must presume, that it was under that call, especially so, when it does not appear that there was any other unfilled call resting upon the county. We are, therefore, of the opinion that appellant was entitled to the bounty of one hundred and fifty dollars, by complying with the terms of the resolution of the Board.

It remains to determine whether he was also entitled to the fifty dollars bounty, offered and given to soldiers who had previously volunteered, and had received no other bounty from the county, under the resolution of the 2"3d of December, 1863, giving a bounty of fifty dollars to all volunteers who had enlisted for the term of three years, since the beginning of the war, and who had received no bounty from the county.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ill. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larimer-v-board-of-supervisors-ill-1868.