Pierce v. Inhabitants of Greenfield

52 A. 765, 96 Me. 350, 1902 Me. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 11, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 A. 765 (Pierce v. Inhabitants of Greenfield) 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
Pierce v. Inhabitants of Greenfield, 52 A. 765, 96 Me. 350, 1902 Me. LEXIS 63 (Me. 1902).

Opinion

Fogler, J.

This is an action of assumpsit to recover for money loaned by the plaintiff to the defendant town upon a town order. The declaration contains special counts upon such order, and also counts for money lent and advanced, for money due upon an account stated, and for money had and received. Plea, the general issue.

The case comes to this court upon report.

The order declared upon, introduced by the plaintiff) is of the following tenor:

$440. Greenfield, March 25, 1893.

To James Doyle, Town Treasurer, or his successor:— Pay to It. F. Pierce four hundred and forty dollars it being for balance of town order No. 52 for the year 1893. M. G. White, Jere Avery, Selecfmen of Greenfield.

No. 67.

Indorsed: Accepted James Doyle Tr. Ree’d on the within one years interest' (26.40) to March 25, 1894. Rec’d on the within 2 years int. 52.80 to March 25, 1896.

It appears by the report that in March, 1893, Mr. Arthur B. Godfrey was the holder of two town orders, numbers 69 and 70 respectively, drawn by the selectmen of Greenfield and payable to Mr. Godfrey, the amount of which aggregated $694.35. These orders were written on the same paper never having been separated, and on that account are referred to in the report as the “double orders.” Both orders bore date of Oct. 20, 1886. Order number 69 was for $300, and stated upon its face “being for part of old order taken up, No. 67, given in the year 1880.”

Order numbered 70 was for $394.35 and stated upon its face “it being for part of old order taken up No. 67 given for the year 1880.”

March 24, 1893, Mr. Godfrey presented the orders above named to the town officers for payment. There was no money in the town treasury from which payment could be made. There was, however, in the hands of the tax collector of the town the sum of $94 which [352]*352was paid to Mr. Godfrey and indorsed on order number 70. Mr. White, chairman of the board of selectmen, then paid to Mr. Godfrey of his own money $600.75, the balance due on the “double” orders, and received the orders from Mr. White.

Mr. White testifies that he bought the orders of Mr. Godfrey and the $600.35 was in payment thereof, while his counsel contends that the fact and circumstances show rather that the money was paid by Mr. White as an advancement to the town. We do not think, for reasons to be hereafter given, that it is material which of the positions is correct.

After the payment to Mr. Godfrey of the amount of his orders, the selectmen requested a loan of $600.75 from the plaintiff with whichtto pay the amount paid by Mr. White, and an order for that amount payable to the plaintiff was drawn and signed by the selectmen, but before its delivery to the plaintiff the town paid Mr. White $160.35, leaving a balance of $440, and the order drawn in favor of the plaintiff was cancelled. The selectmen thereupon drew and signed the order in suit which was delivered to the plaintiff, who paid into the hands of Mr. White the sum of $440. This sum was not paid into the town treasury, but was retained by Mr. White in payment of the balance due him on the amount paid to him by Mr. Godfrey.

At the annual town meeting of the legal voters of the town of Greenfield duly called, held on the 29th day of March, 1897, under an article in the warrant “to see if the town will ratify the following orders : Order No. 67, dated March 20, A. D. 1893, payable to Rufus F. Pierce for four hundred and fifty dollars,” the town voted not to pay R. F. Pierce’s order.

Again at a special town meeting of the legal voters of Greenfield, duly called and notified, under an article in the warrant to see if the town will ratify certain orders drawn by the selectmen of the town upon the treasurer thereof as follows : “An order dated November 25, A. D. 1893, for four hundred and fifty dollars payable to R. F. Pierce numbered 67,” it was voted not to pay R. F. Pierce’s order numbered 67.

At a special meeting of the voters of the town, duly called and [353]*353notified, held on the 6th day of December, 1897, under an article in the warrant, “To see if said town will ratify certain orders drawn by the selectmen of said town upon the treasurer thereof, as follows : An order dated March 25, A. I). 1893 for four hundred and fifty dollars payable to R. K. Pierce numbered 67,” it was voted to pay R. If. Pierce order.

It is the law of this State, settled by a line of decisions, summarized in Lovejoy v. Foxcroft, 91 Maine, 367, that an action will not lie against a town for money loaned to its officers upon the supposed credit of the town, but without the authority of the town, although the money so loaned be applied to the debts and liabilities of the town, unless the town make the act valid by its subsequent ratification. Parsons v. Monmouth, 70 Maine, 262; Lincoln v. Stockton, 75 Maine, 141; Otis v. Stockton, 76 Maine, 506; Brown v. Winterport, 79 Maine, 305; Hurd v. St. Albans, 81 Maine, 343; Lovejoy v. Foxcroft, supra.

To maintain an action for money borrowed by the officers of a town without authority, the plaintiff must prove affirmatively three propositions. 1st. Tliat the money was in fact loaned to the town officers upon the credit of the town as for the town. 2nd. That the money so obtained was either paid into the town treasury or was applied in fact to the discharge of lawful liabilities of the town to that extent. 3rd. That the town has ratified the action of the town officers in so borrowing and applying the money. Brown v. Winterport, supra.

In the case at bar it is not denied that the plaintiff loaned his money to the selectmen of the town of Greenfield on the supposed credit of the town. It is not contended that the selectmen were authorized by the town to borrow the money.

Assuming that the money so borrowed was applied to the payment and extinguishment of a liability of the town, has the town ratified by its corporate vote the action of the selectmen in borrowing and applying the money? The town ata special meeting under a proper article voted to pay the order. We think this vote was an effectual ratification of the acts of the selectmen in borrowing and applying the money, provided the money was applied for a purpose within the [354]*354scope of the corporate powers of the town. Brown v. Winterport, supra.

Nor do we think, as contended by the counsel for the defendants, that the former votes, “not to pay,” preclude the town from a subsequent ratification (at least until the former votes shall have been rescinded). It is true, that when a town has once ratified the unauthorized acts of its selectmen it cannot subsequently rescind' such vote. The reason is that the ratification relates back to the transaction. The vote of ratification at once applies to the act and adopts it as the act of the town. The act is as binding on the town, as if tiie vote were prior in time to the act. A ratification after the act is as potent as authority before the act. Brown v. Winterport, supra.

These reasons do not exist when the town votes “not to pay.” In the case at bar, before such votes, the plaintiff had no legal claim against the town; the town was under no legal obligation to the plaintiff. Those votes did not affect the parties in the least.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 765, 96 Me. 350, 1902 Me. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-inhabitants-of-greenfield-me-1902.