Rackliff v. Inhabitants of Greenbush

44 A. 375, 93 Me. 99, 1899 Me. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 5, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 A. 375 (Rackliff v. Inhabitants of Greenbush) 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
Rackliff v. Inhabitants of Greenbush, 44 A. 375, 93 Me. 99, 1899 Me. LEXIS 15 (Me. 1899).

Opinion

Fogler, J.

Chapter 33 of the Public Laws of 1887, § 1, provides that whenever any person who served in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States during the rebellion and was honorably discharged therefrom, shall die, being at the time of his death a resident of this state, and being in destitute circumstances, the state shall pay the necessary expenses of his burial, not exceeding thirty-five dollars, and the burial shall be in some cemetery not used exclusively for the burial of pauper dead. Section 2 of the same chapter provides that the municipal officers of cities and towns in which such deceased has his residence at the time of his death, shall pay the expenses of his burial, and upon satisfactory proof by such town or city to the governor and council of the fact of such death and payment, the governor shall authorize the state treasurer to refund said city or town the amount so paid.

Andrew Oakes, who, it is admitted, served in the army of the United States during the rebellion and was honorably discharged therefrom, died on the thirtieth day of November, 1890, in Green-bush, in which town he had his residence at the time of his death. The testimony proves that he died in destitute circumstances. He had been a sick man and unable to perform labor for several" years. His only property was a parcel of real estate which was mortgaged to its full value, or more, to secure the payment of his attending physician. The plaintiff, an undertaker residing in Old Town, furnished at the request of one John C. Hinckley, a brother-in-law of Oakes, for the burial of Oakes, a casket, the price of which was twenty-two dollars, and a robe, the price of which was two dollars. At the time of ordering the casket and robe, Hinckley informed the plaintiff that “the state allowed thirty-five dollars for burial money and it came through the town; the town paid it and drawed it back.” Oakes was buried in the [102]*102casket and robe in a general burying ground in the town of Green-bush. When the casket and robe were delivered, the plaintiff gave Hinckley a bill of them and subsequently Hinckley presented the bill to the municipal officers of the town of Greenbush who refused payment, saying, “why didn’t you come and tell us that he was dead so we could go and bury him; ” and, further, that they didn’t know that the state furnished any money to pay it and they were not going to pay it out of their own pockets. The plaintiff brings this suit to recover payment for the casket and robe. Is the action maintainable? We think it is.

It is true, as a general rule, that no man can make himself, by his own act, a creditor of a town. The rule obtains in all cases where the statute imposes upon the officers of a town the performance of some duty, the doing of some act, as in cases of furnishing pauper supplies, of pauper burials, the repair of highways, or in case of contagious diseases, etc. In such cases no person, other than the proper officers of the town, can perform such duties or do such acts at the expense of the town. Thus a town is required by law to furnish relief through its overseers of the poor to any person found within its limits destitute and in need of relief, but, in the absence of any statute authorizing it, no other person can furnish relief, however urgent the necessity may be, on the credit and at the expense of the town. But, in the case at bar, the statute does not require or authorize either the town or its officers to take charge of or provide a burial for the deceased soldier, nor is it required that the expenses of the burial shall be authorized by the municipal officers, or by any officer representing either the town or the state. The state undertakes, through the instrumentality of the town, to “pay” the burial expenses of the soldier. The municipal officers are required to perform no duty, to do no act in the matter of the burial, but are simply required to “pay” the burial expenses; and the state “upon satisfactory proof by such town or city . . . of the fact of such death and payment ” undertakes to refund said town or city the amount so paid. The obvious intention of the statute is that the town shall pay the expenses of burial to whomsoever shall incur them. The case is somewhat analagous [103]*103to the payment of the expenses of the burial of any deceased person by any proper person, in which this court has held that such expenses, so incurred, are a proper charge against the estate of the deceased, though no one is authorized to bind the estate. Phillips v. Phillips, 87 Maine, 324; Fogg v. Holbrook, 88 Maine, 169.

In the case last cited the court says: “The services must be rendered; it is better tbat those things should be done upon the credit of the estate, than that there should be hesitation and inquiry as to who is liable to pay.”

This construction of the act is in accord with the manifest intention of the legislature, which was that no honorably discharged soldier who had served liis country during the war of the rebellion, should, at his death, fill a pauper’s grave; and that there should not be even the semblance of a pauper burial, as would be the case if the municipal officers, who, in towns, are usually overseers of the poor, were required to provide for the burial. If the municipal officers are, under the act in question, in the first instance, to provide or authorize the expenses of such soldier’s burial, they can only do so upon proof of his services and his honorable discharge. The obtaining of such proof may require days or weeks, especially when the deceased served in the navy or marine corps, or in the army in a regiment of another state. Could it have been the intention of the legislature that, in such case, the soldier should remain unburied during the time required for obtaining such proof?

When a bill for such burial expenses is presented to the municipal officers of a town, they then have ample opportunity to investigate and determine whether they come within the purview of the statute. If payment is refused, what is the remedy of the party who provided the burial ? He has none against the state, for the state authorities are required to refund to the town. He has none against tbe municipal officers who have no remedy against the state. His remedy, if he has any, and it is not to be presumed that he is without remedy, can only be by a suit against the town, in which the question of the soldier’s service and of his honorable discharge and of his destitute circumstances at the time of his death can be determined.

[104]*104In the case at bar, the defendant town does not deny that the soldier served.in the army of the United States during the war of the rebellion, or that he was honorably discharged therefrom, or that he died in destitute circumstances; but all these essential facts are admitted or proved. The defense is technically that the town is not liable because it says that the burial should have been provided or authorized by the municipal officers to enable the plaintiff to recover against the town.

The defense says further that no action will lie against the town for such burial expenses because by the statute no right of action is given against the town. It is true that the statute prescribes no specific remedy. It is a familiar maxim that “whenever a statute gives a right, the party shall, by consequence, have an action to recover it.” Stearns v. Atlantic & St. L. R. R. Co. 46 Maine, 115. “It is a vain thing,” says the court in the case above cited, “to imagine a right without a remedy, for want of right and want of remedy are reciprocal.” In Farwell v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A. 375, 93 Me. 99, 1899 Me. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rackliff-v-inhabitants-of-greenbush-me-1899.