Grover v. Inhabitants of Pembroke
Grover v. Inhabitants of Pembroke
Opinion of the Court
The vote of the town of Pembroke of May 3d 1861, upon which the plaintiff relies to maintain this action, was “ that the sum of twenty-five dollars per month, including the army pay, be paid to each citizen of the town of Pembroke who shall enlist in the military service of the State of Massachusetts with the intention of serving in the army of the United States, if called upon during the present year, that the said amounts shall be paid monthly from the time they are accepted by the governor, and that the surplus revenue now held by the town in trust for the United States be appropriated to defray the expenditure.” The defendants contend that this vote was not justified by the third article in the warrant calling the meeting at which the vote was passed. But the records of the meeting show that that article had been taken up and disposed of, leaving open the second, in which the purposes stated were, “to see
The first question to be considered therefore is, whether the vote above quoted was within this article in the warrant. And applying the liberal rules of interpretation which govern documents of this nature, we are of opinion that it was. A warrant issued by town officers for a town meeting is not to be construed with the same strictness as a power of attorney or a penal statute. If it gives intelligible notice of the subjects to be acted upon, it is sufficient. Torrey v, Millbury, 21 Pick. 68. Haven v. Lowell, 5 Met. 40, 41. Gen. Sts. c. 18, § 22. u Furnishing volunteer military companies” would be quite as generally understood to include the raising of men, as to be limited to the arming and equipping of men when raised. If “furnishing” meant no more than that, it might as well have been omitted, for 66 equipments ” would have sufficed without it. And to ££ act on anything relating to the above objects ” might reasonably be held to include obtaining the soldiers themselves, as well as fitting them out and providing for their families.
On the 6th of May 1861, the plaintiff and sixty-two others presented a petition to the governor, pursuant to the Gen. Sts. c. 13, § 14, in which they agreed to be enrolled into a company of volunteer militia to be raised in this and neighboring towns, subject to his orders, and to serve for the period of five years unless sooner discharged agreeably to law, adding, 66 and this enlistment wTe enter into with the full understanding that we are liable to be ordered into active service under the government of the United States.” The governor thereupon on the 7th of May authorized the petitioners to organize themselves into a company of infantry, and ordered an immediate election of officers, which was had the same day, and a military company organized according to the then laws of the Commonwealth.
The plaintiff thus “ enlisted in the military service of the State of Massachusetts with the intention of serving in the
By the terms of the vote of the town, any of its citizens enlisting in the military service of the Commonwealth with the intention of serving in the army of the United States were ta
The same statute of 1861, which ratified the contract of the town with the plaintiff, expressly declared that it should terminate in ninety days from the date of enlistment into the volunteer militia. The St. of 1863, c. 38, by which the contracts of towns to pay bounties for soldiers furnished by them are ratified and made valid, cannot be construed to revive contracts which had been put an end to by express statute, and had not since been renewed by the town. The contract originally made between the plaintiff and the town having been ratified and continued in force for a limited time, and then terminated, by the St. of 1861, there is no ground for implying a new contract beyond that time in face of the express prohibition of that statute, and there was therefore no form of contract between the plaintiff and the town, to which the St. of 1863 could apply.
The state aid which the plaintiff’s family have received from the treasury of the town under the statutes of the Commonwealth is in no sense a payment of or substitute for-the sum which the town had promised to pay to him individually. And it has not been suggested by the town that the bounty received by the plaintiff from the United States is to be considered as “ army pay” under the vote of the town.
The result is therefore that the plaintiff is entitled to recover at the rate of §25 a month for ninety days from the 7th of May 1861, deducting the monthly pay received by him from the United States after the 15th of June 1861, and within that period.
Judgment for the plaintiff according ly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John M. Grover v. Inhabitants of Pembroke
- Status
- Published