Scott v. Town of Cabot
This text of 44 Vt. 167 (Scott v. Town of Cabot) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff claims on behalf of the intestate, to recover of the defendant a bounty of three hundred and twenty-five dollars, under a vote of the town, passed at a town meeting holden December 19, 1863, instructing the selectmen to pay that sum to each of three volunteers, to fill the quota assigned to the town. The article in the warning under which the vote was passed, was, “ To see if the town will authorize their selectmen to pay a bounty to volunteers to fill the quota of Cabot.” This vote, in connection with the article in the warning, we think must be construed to place the business of procuring and contracting with the volunteers, in the hands of the selectmen; and to entitle the plaintiff to recover, he must show a contract between the selectmen, on behalf on the town, and his intestate. The court directed a verdict for the defendant: which would be error if the plaintiff intro[169]*169duced testimony tending to show such a contract. From an examination of the reporter’s minutes of the testimony, we fail to find any evidence tending to show such a contract. The most the evidence tended to show was, that one of the selectmen of the town —before the town-meeting, and when he was without authority to act — gave directions to the intestate’s wife to write to him to enlist, and the town would stop enlisting at home: which letter was received by him before he was mustered in, — at which time he expected a bounty from the town — but not till after he had reenlisted and set his name to the credit of the town. Although the intestate returned to Cabot early in January, 1864, on a furlough for thirty days, there is no evidence that he in any way communicated with the selectmen on the subject, or that the town, or other selectmen, ever knew of, or in any way recognized or ratified, this unauthorized act of one of the selectmen. To bind the town under such a vote, the plaintiff must show a contract by his intestate with the town, assented to by at least two of its selectmen. Livingston v. Albany, 40 Vt., 666.
We do not think the language of the vote — construed in connection with the article in the warning, and the then existing circumstances in relation to its quota — ambiguous, or applicable to future calls on the defendant by the government for volunteers. But whether applicable to past or future calls of the government for volunteers, it required a contract with the town, through the selectmen: which the plaintiff failed to show.
Judgment of the county court is affirmed.
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