Richardson v. . Crandall

The defendant was provost marshal of the twenty-first congressional district of the State of New York, and in January, 1865, was engaged in enlisting and mustering men into the military service of the United States, under the call of the president, of December, 1864. Richardson *Page 356 was engaged in furnishing men to fill the quotas of certain towns; and the defendant, as such provost marshal, before he would enlist and muster in the men, required of him the deposit of the bonds, as security that the men presented by him, then and thereafter, and mustered into the military service of the United States, would not desert the service before reaching the rendezvous.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that this pledge of the bonds was taken by the defendant colore officii, and hence was illegal and void, and this is the first question which I will consider.

Section 1 of the act of congress, passed March 3, 1863 (12 Laws U.S., 1863, 731), provided that "all able-bodied male citizens of the United States, and persons of foreign birth who shall have declared, on oath, their intention to become citizens, under and in pursuance of the laws thereof, between the ages of twenty and forty-five years, except as hereinafter excepted, are hereby declared to constitute the national forces, and shall be liable to perform military duty in the service of the United States, when called out by the President for that purpose;" and by section 2 of the same act the persons between the specified ages, exempted from military duty, were those who were "physically or mentally unfit for service." By the same act it was provided that a provost marshal should be appointed for each congressional district, with the rank and pay of a captain of cavalry, whose duty it was to arrest deserters and spies and to discharge other duties mentioned in the act. By this and subsequent acts provision was made for the enrollment of the national forces and for drafts; and when the president called for forces and ordered a draft, it was provided that each town should receive credit for all enlistments made on behalf or to the credit of the town for the purpose of filling its quota. The provost marshal was, for each congressional district, an enrolling, enlisting and mustering officer, and also had charge of the drafting of men when a draft was ordered.

It appears that the President, by proclamation issued on *Page 357 the 19th day of December, 1864, had called for more of the national forces, and that certain towns in Oneida county were endeavoring, through Richardson, to fill their quotas, under the call, by the enlistment of men. What then was the duty of the defendant as provost marshal? When the men were presented to him for enlistment, it was his duty to examine them, and if he found them of suitable age and "not physically or mentally unfit for the service," to enlist and muster them into the service and send them to the rendezvous. If he found them qualified as above, he had no discretion to exercise; it was his imperative duty to enlist them. The men were a part of the national forces, and had the right to enlist into the military service of their country from patriotic motives or from mercenary motives for the pay they would get, or to escape an impending draft; and the defendant had no right to exclude them. The towns had the right to fill their quotas by enlistment; and when qualified men were thus presented, the defendant was bound to take them. He had no right to inquire into the moral character of the men, or their moral or physical courage, and reject them because he thought they would desert or run in the face of the enemy. It would be only more reprehensible in degree if he had exacted a bond that they would be true and good soldiers during the entire term of their enlistment. Will it be claimed that he could legally have done this? The obedience and duty of soldiers are not secured in this way, and the government has ample power usually to keep its soldiers after they have enlisted, and to apprehend and punish them when they desert.

In this view of the case, this pledge was illegally exacted and was void as taken colore officii. But the result must be the same if we assume that the provost marshal had a discretion whether he would take these men or not for the reason alleged by him. If it was his duty to reject men because he believed they would desert, then he should not have been influenced to take them by any pledge. If he had a discretion to take them or not, then he should have exercised *Page 358 his discretion under his oath of office in view of all the circumstances, uninfluenced by the security which he exacted. After these men were enlisted, it was his duty to use all the means at his command to procure their delivery at the rendezvous. If he suspected that they intended to desert, he should have been the more careful and vigilant. How did taking the pledge have any tendency to prevent desertion? It does not appear that these men had any interest in the bonds pledged, or that they were in any way the particular friends or dependants of Richardson; and after they were enlisted he could have nothing more to do with them, as they were then exclusively under the control of the military officers of the government. So far as I can perceive, the only effect the pledge could have was to make the defendant less vigilant in discharging his duty and guarding the men. If he had any faith whatever in the pledge as a security that the men would not desert, its obvious tendency was to cause him to rely somewhat upon it, and not so much upon his zeal and vigilance in the use of other appropriate means. The pledge in fact seems to have had no effect upon the fidelity of the men, as most of them deserted. Hence, in this view of the case, this pledge must be considered as against public policy, and as taken by the defendant colore officii.

I have reached this conclusion without considering the fact that the defendant exacted the pledge, not only for such men as Richardson then presented for enlistment, but also for such men as he might thereafter present. If the defendant could exact the pledge because he was satisfied, from his examination, that the men then presented intended to desert, what right had he to exact it for men of whom he knew nothing, and who might be the most faithful and patriotic men in the army? This was an arbitrary exaction not authorized by law nor consonant with public policy; and the contract of security thus exacted is condemned by every authority relating to the subject that can be found in the books.

It is claimed, however, by the learned counsel for the appellant, that a security cannot be condemned as taken by *Page 359 a public officer, colore officii, unless it was corruptly taken, taken with a corrupt and illegal intent, and that it will not be condemned if taken with good motives and for a worthy object; and this makes it necessary to examine briefly the principles upon which these securities are condemned.

In Dole v. Bull (2 John. Cas., 239), it was held that a bond taken by a sheriff for the case and convenience of a prisoner in execution, so that he might go at large within the walls of the prison, and conditioned that he should remain a true and faithful prisoner, was not a bond for ease and favor, nor void though not taken in the manner directed by the act relative to jail liberties. The decision was put upon the ground that as the sheriff had the right, without violating his duty, to let the prisoner go at large within the walls of the prison, it was not inconsistent with his duty to take such a bond. The court says: "A distinction is taken between bonds conditioned to remain a faithful prisoner, which are lawful, and bonds to save the sheriff himself against escapes, which are held to be illegal and void. The reason appears to be, that the former are consistent with the duty of the sheriff safely to keep his prisoner, and the latter imply the consent of the sheriff to the prisoner's escape as the alternative of an indemnity for the consequences." This is far from an authority that a public officer may legally exact a bond before he will perform a plain duty, or that he may exact a bond that tends to a lax performance of duty. In Love v.Palmer (7 John., 160), the action was by an under-sheriff upon a bond conditioned to indemnify him against all costs and damages that should arise against him on account of his not taking N. Palmer to prison, on account and by virtue of a ca. sa. which he had in his hands, issued out of the Supreme Court, and the defendants bound themselves to pay the debt and costs for which the ca. sa. issued, and to indemnify the plaintiff against all costs and damages which should arise from the premises. The plaintiff had the prisoner and ca. sa. in his possession when he took the bond, and it was given for the deliverance of the prisoner from custody, *Page 360 although he was not bailable. The bond was held void, as takencolore officii, although it was taken for the precise amount for which the prisoner was arrested, without oppression or evil intent, and from humane motives. It was condemned because the plaintiff took it in violation of the duty imposed upon him by law, and without authority of law. In The People v. Meighan (1 Hill, 298), a bond, taken by a justice of the peace in a prosecution for bastardy, containing, in addition to the provisions required by law, others imposing further obligations on the obligor, was held to be void as taken colore officii. It did not appear that the bond was exacted in the form in which it was given, or that it was taken oppressively or corruptly. It was simply not authorized by law, and it was condemned. InWebbers' Executors v. Blunt (19 Wend., 188), it was held that a promise to a sheriff to indemnify him against all damages to which he might be subjected in consequence of discharging from custody a third person whom he had arrested on legal process, was void, as taken colore officii, although the sheriff was induced to grant the discharge upon false representations of the promissor that the debt, to enforce the payment of which the process had issued, had been satisfied. Here was no oppression and no corrupt intent; and yet in this case Judge Cowen cites the case of Dive v. Mowingham (Plowd. Comp., 67), where the action was upon a bond, taken by a sheriff for a previous offence on an execution; and Chief Justice Montague says, "The prisoner not being bailable, the sheriff took the bond unduly, and coloreofficii sui, which is always taken in malum partem, and signifies an act badly done under the countenance of an office, and it bears a dissembling visage of duty, and is properly called extortion. Wherefore," he adds, "here, inasmuch as the obligation was made for the deliverance of T.M., who was in the custody of the plaintiff or officer, it cannot be denied but that he took the obligation for his deliverance colore officii." Here the learned chief justice was speaking of the manner in which the law characterized the act of taking securities colore officii, and he did not mean to say that the officer *Page 361 must actually have had a corrupt or evil intent; as, in the very case he was deciding, the officer did not act oppressively or corruptly, except as he violated his duty. In Burrall v.Acker (23 Wend., 606), the chancellor says: "The words color of office necessarily imply an illegal claim of right or authority to take the security or to do the act in question, by virtue of his office, which claim is a mere color or pretence on the part of the officer;" and he quotes from Tomlin's Law Dictionary, that "color of office is where an act is evilly done by the countenance of an officer; and is always taken in the worst sense, being grounded upon corruption, to which the office is as a mere shadow or color." The acts described by Tomlin are such as are condemned as done by color of office; but the definition of the term is not broad enough to include all cases, as there are many cases in the books where acts done by color of office have been condemned, although not grounded upon any actual corruption; yet the law may impute a corrupt character to them as done in violation of law. In Webb v. Albertson (4 Barb., 51), it was held that a bond taken in the names of the commissioners of highways of a town, for the benefit of the town in its corporate capacity, and intended to relieve the taxable inhabitants of the town from the payment of a tax for a public improvement, viz., the extension and opening of a public highway, could not be enforced against the obligors. The decision was put upon the ground that the commissioners had a plain duty to perform and a discretion to exercise in laying out the road, and that they might be influenced in the discharge of their duty by the bond. It was conceded that they acted from honest motives, and yet it was held that they exceeded their authority in taking the bond, and that their act must be condemned as against the general policy of the law. In Winter v. Kinney (1 N.Y., 365), it is said that the policy of the law in declaring void agreements and securities taken by public officers, colore officii, is to guard against official oppression on the one side, and a lax performance of duty on the other. Judge WRIGHT, writing the opinion of the court, cites the *Page 362 definition of color of office given by Tomlin; but the very case he was considering was one where a deputy sheriff arrested the plaintiff, in a civil action, on Saturday evening, and the plaintiff agreed with him that if he would become his bail until Monday morning, he would deposit with him the amount for which he was required to give bail, and in case he failed to surrender himself to the deputy on Monday morning, or settle with the plaintiff in the suit against him, then that the deputy should pay the money over to such plaintiff. He made the deposit, and it was claimed to have been forfeited, and was paid over to the plaintiff in the action. He sued to recover the money back on the ground that it was taken by the deputy colore officii; there was no oppression, no evil intent and no corruption, and the deputy seems to have acted from humane motives.

Without citing or examining more cases, I think I may safely say that no case entitled to weight as authority can be found, which decides that a security taken colore officii cannot be condemned unless it was taken with an evil or corrupt intent. The acts of public officers in taking such securities are condemned because they are against the general policy of the law. It matters not that the motives of the officer were good and humane if the acts are of such a character as tend, if countenanced, to oppression or a lax performance of official duty. In all cases where contracts are claimed to be void as against public policy, it matters not that any particular contract is free from any taint of actual fraud, oppression or corruption. The laws look to the general tendency of such contracts. The vice is in the very nature of the contract, and it is condemned as belonging to a class which the law will not tolerate. (Atchesen v. Mallen,43 N.Y., 147.)

We are reminded, on the part of the appellant, that there is no law of the United States prohibiting the taking of this pledge, and that our statute, as to securities taken colore officii (2 R.S., 386, § 59), is not applicable to officers of the United States. This is undoubtedly true, but the statute of our State mostly, if not to it full extent, embodies principles *Page 363 of the common law, and it is important in this case only as indicating what the public policy is. My conclusion, upon this branch of the case, is based upon principles of public policy as sanctioned by the common law and expounded by the ablest jurists.

It is further claimed that if this contract of pledge was illegal and void for the reasons stated, the parties were inpari delictu, and that the contract was so executed that the plaintiff cannot recover; and this claim must be briefly noticed.

No case has been cited in which it has been held that where an officer receives securities or money colore officii, the parties are in pari delictu; and none, I apprehend, can be found. On the contrary, there are cases to be found in the books where money extorted by public officers colore officii has been permitted to be recovered by the parties paying, as money had and received. In Winter v. Kinney, supra, where the question was under consideration, it was not intimated that the defendant could hold the money paid him, because the parties were in paridelictu. The oppressor and oppressed are never upon a footing of equality. Both the statute and the common-law prohibition are aimed at the public officer, and are intended to regulate his conduct. He is the one, and not the person yielding to his exaction, who is at common law liable to be indicted for extortion. The law points out the offender, and in such a case the parties are not in pari delictu. (Oneida Bank v. OntarioBank, 21 N.Y., 496; Sackett's Harbor Bank v. Codd,18 N.Y., 240; Statesburgh v. Smith, 2 Burrows, 924; Clerk v. Shee, Cowp., 200.)

Neither was this an executed contract. These bonds were pledged as a security that the soldiers would not desert. The pledge was by the agreement of the parties, and the law implies that the pledgee may hold the property pledged as security, and that in case of forfeiture, he must, by sale, after notice to the pledgor or by action, foreclose the pledge; and until that be done, the legal title to the property remains in the pledgor, and the transaction is in fieri. If this contract *Page 364 was fully executed, then the pledgee would have nothing more to do except to hold the bonds as his own, and this will not be claimed.

There is another ground upon which the plaintiff's title to these bonds can be upheld. The contract pledging the bonds was without consideration. Richardson was simply an agent for the towns whose quotas he was filling. It does not appear that he was to have any profit whatever from the enlistment of the men, or that he was in any way to be personally benefited by their enlistment. The bonds did not belong to the towns nor to the men enlisted. The defendant parted with nothing on the faith of the pledge, and did nothing which he was not bound by law to do without it. There was no benefit to the pledgor nor harm to the pledgee, and hence there was no consideration.

The defendant had no authority, either in the law, or, so far as appears, in instructions from his superior officers, to take this pledge; and his act has never been ratified by the government. The fact that he notified his superior officer that he had taken it alone, shows no ratification. Besides, he was not the agent of the provost marshal-general, but an agent of the government of the United States; and an act like this, wholly unauthorized by law, could not probably be ratified by any officer of the government. Who, then, shall hold these bonds? The defendant does not claim that he can hold them for his individual benefit. The government has never ratified his unauthorized act, nor, so far as appears, claimed the bonds; and if the plaintiff cannot recover them they will be without an owner.

Two cases were cited in behalf of the defendant, bearing upon this branch of the case, which I will briefly notice. In Harp v. Osgood (2 Hill, 216), the plaintiff, as agent of Lee, took in his own name an unauthorized security, and it was held that Lee, as principal, could ratify the act of his agent and enforce the security in the name of his agent. As the agent had no personal interest in the security, it was said that it would have been void without the ratification of the *Page 365 principal, for the want of consideration. In State of N.Y. v.City of Buffalo (2 Hill, 434), the keeper of the State arsenal at Batavia loaned to the city of Buffalo 200 guns belonging to the State, and took a bond that they should be returned when called for. It was held that this keeper was not a State officer, but the mere agent of the commissary-general, and that while he was wholly unauthorized to make the loan and take the bond, and that thus the city had obtained and used the guns wrongfully, the State could waive the tort, affirm the loan and sue upon the bond for the value of the guns. Before either of these authorities could have any bearing upon this case, it would have to appear that the government of the United States had, in some way, adopted or ratified the act of the defendant in taking the pledge.

Having thus given this case the careful consideration its importance deserves, I have reached the conclusion that the order of the General Term should be affirmed, and that judgment absolute should be rendered against the defendant, with costs.

All concur.

Judgment accordingly.