Roberts v. Field
Roberts v. Field
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of assumpsit brought by Roberts against Field in the Wayne circuit, to recover two hundred and fifty dollars, part of a soldiers’ bounty of three hundred dollars allowed by the city of Detroit to persons who enlisted in the army of the United States after the 21st of September, 1861, and were credited to any ward in the city. No .question arises upon the declaration, which is sufficient, if the facts which the evidence tended to show were sufficient to maintain an action.
The evidence tended to show the following state of facts :
On the 26th day of September, 1861, when the plaintiff enlisted, the only bounty payable by the city to men who should then enlist was fifty dollars. But the fourth ward of the city had undertaken to pay a ward bounty to those who should enlist and be credited to that ward, of three hundred and fifty dollars; and Field was acting as the agent of that ward in procuring enlistments and filling their quota.
(Signed) “ Peter Eoberts.
“In presence of E. S. Dillon.”
Eoberts ¿dmits the payment to him of the fifty dollars city bounty allowed at the time of this enlistment, and of
But on the 1st day of October, 1864, the common eoun-/ cil of the city, in accordance with the resolutions and recommendations of a citizens’ meeting that day held, adopted a resolution giving one hundred dollars in cash and two hundred dollars in bonds of the city (making three hundred dollars) to each person who, since the 21st day of September, 1864, had been, or should therefrom be, enlisted and credited to any ward in the city. This three hundred dollars, however, seems to have been intended, so far as we can judge from the record, to include the fifty dollars previously allowed. The plaintiff, Roberts, came within this resolution] and Field, on or about the 10th day of October, 1864, on presentation of the instrument signed by Roberts, a copy of which is above given, obtained from the city one hundred dollars in cash and a city bond of two hundred dollars, which he has since negotiated and upon which he received the money. Roberts having heard of this additional bounty, wrote in October, from the front near Petersburg, to his brother in Detroit to call on Mr. Field and obtain from him the two hundred and fifty dollars balance of the city bounty still due him. The brother, calling upon Field for that purpose, was told by the latter that the plaintiff had assigned that two hundred and fifty dollars to him; and he therefore declined to pay it. .
Some time in the early part of the winter of 1865, plaintiff having a furlough to attend a court martial at Jackson, came up from Petersburg and called upon Field,-at Detroit, for the balance of the city bounty due him, which Field had collected of the city. Field denied owing him this two hundred and fifty dollars; admitted he had collected it of the city; but claimed it under the paper or assignment above stated, which had been signed by plaintiff; telling him (plaintiff) that he (Fi^ld) had taken the risk
This evidence has in no way been contradicted or controverted ; and Field, who was himself sworn as a witness, does not even intimate that it is not true in every particular. But he insists that he had a right to keep the two hundred and fifty dollars, and claims that it was a fail-business transaction.
The ground upon which his counsel have undertaken to base this claim, so far as we can comprehend from the brief and arguments in the case, are:
1st. That Field had taken a contract and obligated himself to fill the quota of the 4th ward under the pending call of the President for 500,000 men, and that the ward contributing the bounty of three hundred and fifty dollars per man, he, Field, was bound, at his own risk, to procure the men and fill the quota; and, though not expressly asserted by the counsel, the idea is shadowed forth and is logically involved in the argument and absolutely necessary to make such a supposed contract any ground for retaining the two hundred and fifty dollars, that, as a part of the arrangement or contract with the ward, he was to be allowed any city bounty which the common council might see fit to allow to, or for, men thus enlisting;
2d. That the resolution of the council, of October 1st, giving the three hundred dollars bounty, gave it, not to the enlisted man or for his benefit, but to the person who should furnish the man; and,
Sd. That Roberts enlisted and was credited to the 4th ward under this arrangement, and is therefore to be considered as “ furnished ” by Field, within the meaning of this resolution.
As to the first point, it is sufficient to say, that there is no evidence in the case tending to show any such contract, or any contract on the part of Field, or that he had become bound in any way to fill the quota of the ward. The fact, if it existed, was one which it devolved upon
But if he had made a contract with the ward to fill its quota, this could give him no right to any part of the city bounty of three hundred dollars, unless it was further shown, not only that the ward had contracted that he should have the benefit of any city bounty that might be given on account of the men enlisted and credited to that ward, but that the city, by its common council, had granted this bounty for the relief of the respective wards, instead of that of the enlisted men; so that, though the ward gave a bounty of three hundred and fifty dollars per man, three hundred dollars was paid by the city, leaving only fifty dollars to be finally met by the ward. Then, by showing he had paid the whole ward bounty himself, or, if first paid by the ward, that he had paid over to the ward this two hundred and fifty dollars, he would have made a good defense.
If such, however, had been the contract, and such the effect of the resolution of the council, why should Field have paid Roberts the fifty dollars? No reason can be suggested entitling Field to the two hundred and fifty dollars of the city bounty which would not equally have entitled him to retain the fifty dollars which he paid over. Nor, in fact, upon the theory he now sets up, does it satisfactorily appear why he had not just as good a right to retain the three hundred and fifty dollars ward bounty, which was as clearly covered by Roberts’ assignment as the city bounty. But the resolution of the common council will bear no such construction. There is nothing in it showing that it was intended to relieve any ward in the
The second ground relied upon by the defendant is equally baseless, viz: “That the resolution of the couucil giving three hundred dollars was intended for the benefit of those persons only who should furnish persons to enlist, and not for that of the enlisted men.”
Some portion of the first resolution may not, upon the first view, seem entirely clear, but when all are read together and carefully considered, the meaning is clear enough.
They read as follows: “Whereas, at a meeting of the freemen and electors of the city of Detroit, held in the City Hall in said city, upon the first day of October, 1864, in pursuance of the proclamation of the mayor, and in accordance tuith laio, it was voted to raise one hundred and fifty thousand dollars by loan upon the bonds and credit of the city, in order to pay a city bounty of one hundred dollars to each person who, since the'21st of September, 1864, has been, or shall hereafter be, mustered into the military or naval service of the United States, and who shall be credited upon the quota of any ward in the city, under the present call of the President for five hundred thousand men, and also to issue to such persons so mustered, and credited, the bonds of the city, in an additional sum of not to exceed two hundred ($200) dollars, to each such person, therefore, Resolved, That his honor the mayor, the chairman of the committee on ways and means, and the controller, be and are hereby directed to have executed, issued and negotiated, from time to time, so much of said first mentioned bonds as shall be necessary to raise sufficient money to pay such sums of one hundred dollars each to such person or persons as shall furnish satisfactory evidence that he or they have furnished a person who has, since the date aforesaid, been,
“ Resolved, That the controller be and is instructed to keep an account, showing the amount of bounties in cash or bonds, so paid to persons credited to each of the several wards of the city.
“Resolved, That no bounty in cash or bonds be paid or issued to any person to be credited, or who is credited to any ward, the quota of which shall be known to the controller to be full, at the time such person was mustered.
“ Resolved, That the mayor, the chairman of the committee of ways and means, and the controller, are hereby empowered to fix the form of all the bonds so to be issued, and the respective times of the maturity thereof.”
Now, it will be noticed, that by the preamble it clearly •-.•.appears that these resolutions were intended to be based ¿upon the authority of a vote of the electors of the city, held on the first of October, 1864, in pursuance of a proerlamation of the mayor, “and in accordance with law.” And it appears .also, by the proceedings of the citizens’ meeting, given in the record, that the resolution submitted to the meeting to be voted upon, was a resolution adopted by the council on the 20th of September. The law referred to as the authority for the meeting and vote of the electors, •would seem to have been the act of February 5th, 1864 (Latos of 1864, PP- 58 to 59), which act seems to have been followed, except as to the amount of the bounty voted, that act only authorizing two hundred dollars. But, for the authority to raise the three hundred dollars, reliance was doubtless had upon some future legislation; and the act of the next session ratified such action. — See Laws of 1865, pp. 140 to 145,
And, as it was quite customary not to pay over the bounty to the recruit until he had joined his regiment on the field and sent a certificate to that effect (as was shown in this case), it became customary for the enlisted men to make an assignment on the back of their certificate of enlistment, to some person who could thus draw the bounty in the absence of the party himself. This would be evidence, as between the assignee and the city, that the assignee had paid the soldier his bounty, and this, with the proof of his' having joined his regiment, might be considered as evidence that he had, within the meaning of the first resolution, “furnished” such enlisted man. If the resolution can be understood as going beyond this, it can only be construed as intended to cover cases, which sometimes did occur, in which individual citizens, upon their own account and with their own money, had “furnished,” or, in other words, hired a man to enlist in the army; a case which, in principle, does not differ from that just mentioned. Disputes might also arise between the enlisted man and others claiming to have hired and paid him to enter the army, or between the person thus assigning and the person claiming the bounty under the assignment, whether the payment
Such, we think, is the reasonable construction of the first resolution, considered with reference to the subject matter, the preamble and the subsequent resolutions.
On the other hand, we should be doing injustice to the patriotism of the common council of that day, to attribute to them the intention of granting the bounty without reference to the benefit of the soldier himself, who was to risk his life in defense of his country, should we assume that the object of granting such liberal bounties, for which the property and the energies of the people were to be so heavily taxed, was merely to enable bounty brokers to speculate in the blood and bones of their more patriotic fellow citizens.
The assignment executed by the plaintiff, if it can be construed to apply to any future bounty, though sufficient evidence, as between the defendant and the city, that the bounty had been paid or purchased by defendant, was, considered with reference to the mode of transacting that kind of business, by no means conclusive between the assignee and the plaintiff, but open to explanation by oral evidence like a mere receipt. That evidence was given, and showed clearly that only fifty dollars of the city bounty was, in legal effect, as between the parties themselves, assigned to defendant, and that the balance was received to the plaintiff’s use.
As to the third point, we think the plaintiff, within the fair meaning of the resolution, and in view of the evidence-in the case, furnished himself as an enlisted man, and as between him and the defendant, he was clearly entitled, to the balance of the city bounty of two hundred and fifty dollars. In fact, we see no more plausible ground on which
The judgment must be reversed, with costs to the plaintiff in error, and a new trial awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Peter Roberts v. Moses W. Field
- Status
- Published