Tatum's ex'or v. Commonwealth

36 Va. 56, 9 Leigh 32
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Va. 56 (Tatum's ex'or v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tatum's ex'or v. Commonwealth, 36 Va. 56, 9 Leigh 32 (Va. 1837).

Opinions

Parker, J.

It appears, that Henry Tatum was a lieutenant in the Virginia line on continental establishment, and continued in service, it seems, from March 1776 until the new arrangement of the army was made in the fall of 1778, when he became a supernumerary officer, and so remained till the end of the war. He claims to be entitled to half pay under the act of May 1779, ch. 6. That was an act manifestly intended to hold out inducements to persons to enter and to continue in the service, which at that time it wás absolutely necessary to offer, in consequence of the rapid depreciation of the paper money in circulation, and of the utter inadequacy of the pay then given. Its words are these: “ All general officers of the army, being citizens of this commonwealth, and all field officers, captains and subalterns, commanding, or who shall command, in the battalions of this commonwealth on continental establishment, or serving in the battalions raised for the immediate defence of this state, or for the defence of the United States, and all chaplains, physicians, surgeons, and surgeon’s mates, being citizens of this common[58]*58wealth, and not being in the service of Georgia or of . any other state, provided congress do not make some tantamount provision for them, who shall serve hence-L forward, or from the time of their being commissioned, until the end of the war; and all such officers who have or shall become supernumerary on the reduction of any of the said battalions, and shall again enter into the said service, if required so to do, in the same or any higher rank, and continue therein until the end of the war, shall be entitled to half pay during life, to commence from the determination of their command or service.”

We are saved much trouble in settling the true construction of this act, by Markham's and Lilly's cases, decided in this court, and in my opinion properly decided. 1 Leigh 516. 525. The latter case, particularly, settles the point that a supernumerary officer, not entering again into service, (unless he was called on and refused so to do) is entitled under the act to half pay for life. ' It also decides, that lapse of time, similar to that occurring in this case, does not afford any presumptiou of payment or abandonment of the claim. Indeed, the circumstances here are stronger to account for the delay; because claims less questionable had been repelled, and the door shut against the claimants, by the resolutions of the legislature and the decisions of the court of appeals in Innis v. Roane, 4 Call 379.

If officers of the state line, becoming supernumerary after the act of 1779, and actually serving until February 1783, when the war was substantially at an end, were driven away and denied relief under that act, it could not be expected of Tatum, and others in the same predicament, to present and make continual claim of their title to half pay. Their laches, under such circumstances, is no evidence of payment or abandonment ; and I am not prepared to presume a fact, which I know not to exist.

[59]*59The first clause of that part of the act of 1779 already .... .. . , , cited, applies, m terms, as well to officers in the battalions of the commonwealth on continental establishment, being citizens, as to officers of the state line proper. It is impossible to make this plainer by argument. The words “ such officers,” in the second clause, can refer to no other than the officers on continental establishment and in the immediate service of the state, mentioned before. Supernumeraries of that class and description, who had, as well as those who thereafter should, become such, were to be entitled to half pay during life.

Then, as it would seem to me, there is really but one question in this case about which ihere is a reasonable doubt, unless we are prepared to overturn the principles adjudged in Lilly's case, and to decry the many subsequent judgments rendered in this court in conformity with it; and that question is, whether the act of 1779 embraces supernumeraries before, as well as after, the date of the act? Lilly's case, it may be said, is not an authority upon this point, because Lilly became a supernumerary after May 1779; but it is apparent that the majority of the court recognized no such distinction, nor did the dissenting judge allude to it. On the contrary, all the concurring judges speak broadly of supernumeraries, before, as well as after, the date of the act; and the train of reasoning by which they justified their decision applies as strongly to the one class as the other. Thus judge Carr says-—“At the passage of this act, the history and laws of the period tell us, there were a groat number of supernumeraries; men inferiour to none; men to whom the state was as deeply indebted for past service, and whose future services she deemed it as important to retain, as those of the officers in actual service : for these men, under the name of supernumeraries, in contradistinction to officers in actual service, the law meant to provide.” And in another passage he quotes the words of the law thus—“ All offi[60]*60cers who are now supernumerary, and shall again enter the service if required so to do”—considering these ex- ■ pressions equivalent with those actually used, viz. “ All such officers who have or shall become supernumerary” &c. ■ Judge Green leaves as little doubt of his interpretation of the meaning of the law; for in one passage of his opinion he says—“ I thought, until very recently, that there were strong motives to influence the legislature in making a discrimination between those who served to the end of the war, and supernumeraries, (especially the great number becoming so by the reduction of fourteen regiments or battalions, in 1777, from ten to eight companies, and never again called into the service), and that such discrimination had been made;” but he adds, “ Subsequent reflection has satisfied me I was mistaken.” And judge Coalter, throughout his opinion, argues in favour of supernumeraries in general, both of the continental and state lines, without regard to the time of their becoming supernumerary.

The grounds upon which the court justified its opinion in Lilly's case were, the terms of the law; the motives for making it; the fact that supernumeraries were still officers, liable to be called on at a moment’s warning; that having seen service, the legislature, in anticipation of future exigencies, wished to hold out an inducement to them to retain their commissions; and that thus holding them, they could not enter into inconsistent engagements, nor refuse to enter into active service (without being liable to military censure and punishment) “ if required so-to do.” All these reasons and grounds apply with as much force to officers who were supernumerary at the date of the law, as to those becoming so afterwards.

But let us attend to the occasion of making this law, and its terms.

On the 24th November 1778, congress, adverting to the fact that from the alteration of the military estab[61]*61lishment, and other causes, many valuable officers had .... been

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