Upton v. Stoddard

47 N.H. 167
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 47 N.H. 167 (Upton v. Stoddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Upton v. Stoddard, 47 N.H. 167 (N.H. 1866).

Opinion

Sargent, J.

Chapter 4023, Pamphlet Laws of 1864, p. 3049, provides that the Governor may appoint State agents to recruit in the insurgent States agreeably to an act of Congress passed in 1864, the men so raised to be credited to the several cities, towns, &c., in proportion to the quota of such city or town. Also that the Governor may aj>point such agent for any city or town or sub-district in the State, that may desire the same,- and that such recruits shall be counted upon the quota of such city, town, or sub-district. The act also provides for the compensation of such agents, and by whom it shall be paid, and that a specified bounty be paid to such recruits, and how that shall be paid.

Section 6 provides that the Governor may, by proclamation, offer cer[169]*169tain bounties to different classes of men there specified, who may enlist or volunteer for the different periods of time there mentioned.

Section 7 provides that "any city may by vote of its city council, and any town or place may at any legal meeting thereof duly notified and holden for that purpose, upon or in anticipation of any call of the United States Government for troops during the present war, raise money and appropriate the same as bounty to each person, except those enlisted in or from insurgent States, who shall be mustered into the military, naval or marine service of the United States, or shall have been mustered into said service since the call of the President, dated the fourteenth day of March, 1864, and prior to the passage of this act, to fill the quota of such city, town or place, whether such person shall have voluntarily enlisted or volunteered as a substitute for a drafted or enrolled man, such bounty in no case to exceed, in addition to the State bounty, the sum of one hundred dollars for each one year’s man, two hundred dollars for each two year’s man, and three hundred dollars for each three year’s man, and in the same proportion for any other term of service; and such city, town or place may make such distinction in the bounties to be paid between volunteers and substitutes of drafted or enrolled men as it may deem expedient; and any city, town or place in the same manner may raise money and appropriate the same, as bounty to each man drafted for one year therefrom, who shall be mustered into the service of the United States as part of the quota of such city, town or place, in addition to the State bounty, a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars. And any city, town or place in the same manner may raise money and appropriate such sum as they may deem expedient, to be paid as such bounty to any person who may for three months preceding have been an inhabitant of such city, town or place, enlisting on the quota of such city, or any ward thereof, town or place, and actually mustered into the military, naval or marine service of the United States, and said cities, towns or places may make such distinctions between the bounties, to be paid men volunteering for one, two, or - three years, as they may deem expedient.”

In this section the first class provided for are those who shall have voluntarily enlisted or volunteered as substitutes for drafted or enrolled men, who should be accepted and mustered into service, who were to receive a certain specified and limited bounty. The drafts were made only from the enrolled men, so that a volunteer for a drafted man, was a volunteer for one who was both enrolled and drafted, while a volunteer for an enrolled man was in place of one liable to draft.

The second class are drafted men for one year, who should be mustered into service, &c., as part of the quota of such city, town or place, Ac. This last provision was undoubtedly intended to be applied to both classes mentioned; that those to whom the bounties were authorized to be paid should be counted as a part of the quota of the city, town or place paying them. The bounty to this second class was also limited in amount. This class were all of course enrolled, were both enrolled and drafted, but it made no difference how long they had resided in the town where they were drafted, while the first class need-not be [170]*170enrolled and might have their residence anywhere except in the insurgent States.

The third class are those who may for three months preceding, have been inhabitants of such city, town or place, enlisting on the quota of such city, &c., and actually mustered into service. This class must be made up of those who have been inhabitants of the place three months, and who shall voluntarily enlist on the quota of such place. It made no difference whether they were enrolled or exempt from military duty. With this class the amount of bounty is unlimited.

Under this law the town of Stoddard held a meeting, and the article in the warrant so far as here material, was, "To see what bounty the town will vote to pay enrolled men who * * * may volunteer or furnish substitutes for the service of the United States, and to raise and appropriate money therefor, or act anything thereon.” The town had only in view the relief and compensation of enrolled men. Whatever else they might have done under the law, the article in the warrant had reference to enrolled men only. The vote is in accordance with the article in the warrant, saying nothing about the substitutes in the vote as they might have done under the warrant, if they had chosen to do so. The vote was "to pay enrolled men of said town who may volunteer for the service of the United States, for the term of one year, and are accepted, the sum of one thousand dollars each, to fill the town quota on the present call for three hundred thousand men.”

This vote could not have been intended to cover the first class mentioned in this section of the law, for that class was confined to those who should enlist or volunteer as substitutes for enrolled or drafted men. The vote did not in terms and evidently was not intended to embrace any of that class.

The second class are drafted men who should be mustered into service. This class was not included in this vote. The only class to which this vote could properly apply was the third class, and by the amount of the bounty voted it is evident that it was intended to apply to that class only; and as a general rule, no doubt those who were enrolled on the quota of a town had resided there three months or more, though there might be exceptions.

Now suppose all the enrolled men in town had resided there more than three months. Then, while the law authorized the voting of bounties without limit to all who had thus resided in town, whether enrolled or exempts, the vote would only take in apart of what the law covered; but we think that the town having the right to vote such a bounty to all persons having the necessary residence, and who should enlist or volunteer and be accepted, would have the right thus to select any given portion of such persons as were embraced in the provisions of the law, and confine their vote to such portion. The town might make a farther limitation, if they saw fit, than the law had made, and still the vote would be legal, so far as the class which they selected in the vote was within the limits of the class described in the law.

Again, suppose the vote in this case had been to pay to William O. Upton the sum of one thousand dollars if he shall volunteer, & °., and [171]*171be accepted to fill the town quota, &c., although nothing had been said in the vote as to whether said Upton was enrolled in said town, or whether he had resided there three months;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.H. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upton-v-stoddard-nh-1866.