VanDeuzer v. Estate of Gordon

39 Vt. 111
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 Vt. 111 (VanDeuzer v. Estate of Gordon) 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.

Bluebook
VanDeuzer v. Estate of Gordon, 39 Vt. 111 (Vt. 1866).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WiLSON, J.

The general question in this case is whether- the instrument in question, purporting to be the last will and testament of Seth B. Gordon, is valid as a soldier’s will. It appears that on the 2d day of September, 1862, he .enlisted at Worcester as a private in a company afterwards known and called company A, in the 51st regiment of Massachusetts volunteers, a regiment raised as a part of the quota of that commonwealth, under the order issued by the war department by order of the President of the United States, to serve for nine months, unless sooner discharged. The case shows that Gordon joined his company and regiment in camp at Worcester, and while in camp there he was, on the 25th day of September, 1862, mustered into the military service of the United States. After he was mustered into the service, on the 29 th day of September, 1.862, while he was with his company and regiment in camp at Worcester, he wrote and signed the instrument in question, intending the same as his last will and testament. Gordon died of disease on the 12th day of July, 1863, without having been discharged from, or mustered out of service ; and it is claimed that his death did not occur until after his term of enlistment had expired. The clause of the instrument upon which this point is raised is in these words : “ I would that if 1 should die by disease, or be hilled before my term of enlistment expires, that my property be disposed of as I, at this time, dictate.” The fundamental rules of construction require that the sense in which [117]*117Gordon used the words, “ my term of enlistment,” should govern so far as it can he gathered from the instrument itself, in the light of surrounding circumstances.

He enlisted with the intention of joining a particular company and regiment, neither of which was fully organized at the time he executed his enlistment contract. His company was full at the time he made the instrument in question, but at that time the regiment to which his company was attached was not full, nor was it fully made up and mustered into service until the 25th of November, 1862. It is not claimed that Gordon understood at the time of making the alleged will that his term of service would expire before the expiration of the term of service of other members of his company, nor is there anything in the case which shows that he understood at the time of making the instrument, that his company would be entitled to a discharge until the whole regiment should be discharged. We must, therefore, understand that Gordon enlisted with full knowledge of the effect of his enlistment .contract, that under it, he would be required to serve for the period of nine months from and after the day on which his regiment should be accepted and mustered into the United States service, and in this sense, we think, he used and understood the words in the instrument, “ my term of enlistment.” The term of service of his regiment expired on the 25th of August, 1863, consequently the contingency upon which he desired the instrument should take effect, happened before his term of enlistment expired. Section 9 of chapter 49 of the General Statutes, provides that “ nothing in this chapter shall be construed to prevent any soldier, in actual military service, or any mariner or seaman being at sea, from disposing of^his wages, or other personal estate as he mght otherwise have done.” By this section the formalities in the execution of a will, required by the general provisions of the statute, are dispensed with. Under the provisions of the section referred to, in order to constitute the instrument a valid soldier’s will, Gordon must have been in actual military service at the time of its execution. The term service, in its general sense, embraces all the details of the military art. In this sense of the term Gordon was in military service at the time he wrote and signed the instrument. He [118]*118was subject to all tbe laws and regulations for tbe government of a soldier who bad enlisted for the purpose of joining a certain company and regiment. He was in camp under instruction in military drill and discipline, and performing such other service as might be required of a soldier before his company and regiment were accepted and mustered into the principal service for which they were to be organized. The term service in its restricted sense is the exercise of military functions in the enemy’s country in the time of war, or the exercise of military functions in the soldier’s own state or country in case of insurrection or invasion, and in this sense the words of the statute, “actual military service,” should be understood. At the time Gordon executed the instrument the commonwealth of Massachusetts was not invaded, there was no warfare in that state ; he did not enlist in view of performing actual military service in that state, in the sense contemplated in the exception of the statute, and at that time he had not, nor had his company or regiment, been ordered to the enemy’s country. The exception of the statute, in respect to soldier’s wills, is founded upon the necessity of the case. It is limited to cases where from the actual or supposed situation of the soldier he is exposed to the perils incident to actual warfare. It is clear that such was not the situation of Gordon at the time he made the instrument, and that he was not in condition while at Worcester to make the soldier’s will.

It is insisted by the appellant that the letter written by Gordon while at Newbern, in military service, contains a recognition by him of the instrument as his last will and testament. It appears that the regiment to which Gordon belonged was mustered into service on the 25th of November, 1862, and on that dSy Gordon, with his regiment left Worcester and went under orders to Newbern in the state of North Carolina, and that he remained in the vicinity of Newbern, or in the military department of which North Carolina formed a part, that he engaged and continued in military service there, until the fore part of July, 1863, when the regiment left that state to return to Worcester to be mustered out of service.

While Gordon was in the state of North Carolina, as a soldier, he wrote the letter in question ; and we are entirely agreed that he was [119]*119at that time in actual military service within the meaning of the statute. He was then in the enemy’s country engaged in actual warfare. He was liable at any hour to engage in battle, and while serving in that department, whether in camp, or campaign service, he was in actual military service, as fully as if he had been engaged in actual combat with the enémy.

It is not necessary in order to make a valid soldier’s will that the soldier should be in extremis. The statute was enacted for the benefit of the able-bodied soldier, asjwell as for the soldier who is dying of disease or wounds. Under a different rule of interpretation the soldier who is about to engage in battle, might be wholly deprived of the provisions of the statute. Nor is it essential to the validity of a soldier’s will that it should be made or executed in the face of the enemy, or while the army is preparing for an immediate engagement, for, at such time, from the very nature of the circumstances, the engagement must be delayed to give opportunity for the soldier’s to make their wills, if they desire to make them, or they must be deprived of the provisions of the statute. When a soldier is in the enemy’s country, performing military service, whether in camp, in campaign or in battle, such service is

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Bluebook (online)
39 Vt. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vandeuzer-v-estate-of-gordon-vt-1866.