The 12th section of the militia law of this State, Chap. 164, provides, that to every company there shall be a Clerk, who shall be one of the Sergeants, and shall be appointed by the Captain or commanding officer of the company. The tenure of the office, thus created, is not made, in any manner, dependant on the continuance in office of the Captain or commanding officer by whom the appointment was made. He is not Clerk of the Captain but of the company; and his duties are prescribed by statute, and continue to devolve upon him after the resignation or promotion of the .officer appointing him, in the same manner as before.
The law provides how he may. be reduced to the ranks, for disobedience of orders, neglect of duty, or unmilitary conduct; but it does not require a new appointment of clerk at every change of commanding officer of -the company, any more than it does a new appointment of Adjutant or Quarter-master on the resignation of the Colonel of the regiment to which they belong. 2 Greenl. 431.
To prove the enrolment, the plaintiff produced the record of the company roll, on which the name of the defendant was borne. But as it did not appeal’, by that record, when the name was entered, the Justice declined to receive it as evidence. The form of a record of a company roll, as prescribed by the Adjutant General, does not contain a column for the time when all the members of the company were enrolled, but only a column in which is to be entered the “ time of additional enrolments made after the Thursday'following the second Monday of September." If, as was alleged in the argument and not denied, Smith’s name was borne on the company roll of the preceding year, it would *33clearly appear by record evidence that he had been so long enrolled as to be liable to do military duty in the company in which the plaintiff is clerk, at the time when it is alleged he incurred the penalty.
Hobbs, for the plaintiff.It is said in Sawtel v. Davis, 5 Greenl. 440, that in the form furnished by the Adjutant General as the form of a return of an enrolment, there is a column designated as the one in which the time when any citizen shall be enrolled, shall be entered.— Whether such forms are still in use does not appear; but if they are, the return was not the document offered as evidence in this case. — If there be now in use any such paper as a “ return of an enrolment,” nothing appears but that such return of this company indicated the time when Smith was enrolled. No such paper was offered as evidence. The record was the proper evidence, and it does not appear but that contained every fact, in relation to Smith, either required by law, or indicated by the Adjutant General’s form, to be recorded. If Smith Was enrolled after the Thursday following the second Monday of September, then the time of his enrolment ought to have been entered in the column for noting the time of additional enrolments. But if he had been a member of the company and his name was on the roll of the preceding year, there was ample record proof of his seasonable enrolment; —■ and, in that respect, the case did not, like Sawtel v. Davis, depend upon parol evidence.
We do not, however, give any definite opinion upon this point in the case, as we are clear that the first error is well assigned, and for that the judgment must be reversed.