Gilman v. Inhabitants of Patten

Appleton, C. J.

The plaintiff was drafted August 14, 1863, into the service of the United States, on the quota of the defendant town, and was discharged therefrom August 14, 1865, having received no town bounty.

The defendants, on March 5,1870, received from the state treasurer $4,300 in bonds and $75 in currency, under the act of 1868, c. 227, the town having passed votes, “ 1st. That the selectmen be authorized to divide the money belonging to the soldiers according to their best skill and judgment and in an equitable manner.” *187“ 2d, That the money belonging to the soldiers in the treasury be divided on or before the first day of July, A. D. 1870.”

The selectmen allowed the plaintiff $36.33, for which he gave the following receipt: ,

“ Patten, July 9, 1870. Received of the town of Patten, by hand of James S. Mitchell, thirty-six dollars and thirty-three cents, being my share of moneys received from the state under the act for the equalization of the municipal war debt, and in full discharge and satisfaction for my claim against the town. Charles JEL Gilman.”

The writ in this ease is dated June 30, 1876. The plaintiff seeks to recover a further sum in addition to that for which he gave his receipt. To this claim, and to the amount claimed, the defendants interpose various answers.

I. Reliance is placed on the statute of limitations. But that affords no bar.

On July 9, 1870, the plaintiff was at the treasurer’s office to receive his dividend of the surplus to be divided. That lie demanded it is necessarily inferrable from the receipt,-for we cannot suppose the treasurer would pay without being asked.

Further, a special demand was made in March for the balance claimed.

II. It is claimed that the receipt given is an answer to the plaintiff’s claim.

Had there been evidence that the receipt was given on condition that it was to be in full satisfaction, and, if not so accepted, it was not to be paid, it would have been a grave question whether the plaintiff’ could recover. But there is no evidence that such was the fact. The plaintiff says he did not know how much was due; that, supposing this to be the true amount, ho signed the receipt, not intending to discount anything to the town.

A receipt is always open to explanation. If the plaintiff, without fault, has received less than his due, he is entitled to recover whatever may be remaining due.

III. The money received was for the reimbursement of the town in accordance with the provisions of the act. The accruing interest belonged to them. The soldier can only claim interest after default of the town.

*188IV. In the • division of tbe money received, after deducting $1,420 for bounty money paid, the town made a further deduction of $466.80 for “ recruiting and other expenses.”

But the last mentioned sum was not actually paid out ” as bounty, and therefore was not within the act of 1868, c. 228, to be deducted. It remains, therefore, the proper subject of division.

V. It is objected that twenty-four three years men who enlisted prior to July, 1862, and are not credited to any town, are not within the statute and are not entitled to any portion of the surplus.

But those who enlisted prior to July 1, 1862, without any bounty, are as much entitled to remuneration as those who subsequently enlisted in consideration of a bounty, greater or smaller, as the case may be, or those who, declining to enlist, were drafted into the national service against their wills. Assuredly no discrimination can equitably be made adverse to those who, without compulsion or expectation of bounty, enlisted at the first call made on their patriotism.

The statute of 1868, c. 225, sanctions no such unjust inequality.

The basis of reimbursement is fixed by section one, which provides that each city, town and plantation shall receive and be reimbursed from the state one hundred dollars for every man furnished for the military service of the United States towards its quota for the term of three years, under the call of the president of July 2, 1862, and all subsequent calls, and in the same proportion for every man so furnished and accepted for any shorter period, in manner as is hereinafter provided.” In determining the amount to be reimbursed to the town regard is to be had to the town quota.

But the money in the town treasury, what is to be done with it ? This is determined by section six, which provides that the amount received, “ or the surplus of the same above the amount actually paid out to the soldiers who enlisted or were drafted and went any time during the war, or, if deceased, to their legal representatives.” The division of the money, it will be seen, is not based on the quota of the town. It is to be appropriated to those u who enlisted or were drafted and went any time during the *189war.” If there is any class of soldiers who especially deserve reward for their meritorious services, it is those who volunteered prior to the call of July, 2, 1862. They are within the express language of the act, and most emphatically within its equity.

The counsel for the plaintiff rely on case of Riggs v. Lee, 61 Maine, 499, as adverse to the views here advanced. But the question now under consideration was there neither raised, discussed, considered nor decided. There was no claim for soldiers who served prior to the date of July 2,1862. The soldiers claiming their distributive share of the surplus were soldiers on the town’s quota, and the decision is that those who served without receiving a bounty were entitled to recover their share of the surplus referred to in section six. It in no way negatives the equal or greater equities of the volunteers who went to the war prior to July 2, 1862.

The plaintiff, then, has no right to any portion of the surplus belonging to “ twenty-four three years men, who enlisted prior to July 2, 1862.”

VI. The money received under section one is at the rate of $100 for every three years man furnished and accepted, and in the same proportion for every man furnished and accepted for a shorter period. By section six towns furnishing no bounty, or less than §100, are entitled to the certificate provided by section three after they have voted to appropriate the “ sum to which they would be entitled, or the surplus of the same above the sum paid out, to the soldiers who enlisted or were drafted and went any time during the war, or, if deceased, to their legal representatives.” But how was this to be appropriated ? So as to equalize bounties among them, or to increase the existing inequalities ? Ve think so as to equalize, as far as may be, the town bounties. If A has enlisted for three years and has received a town bounty of $50, he is not to come in for a share of the surplus until all those who have received no town bounty shall have received, regard being had to the length of enlistment, to the same extent, and then, all being on an equality, the balance is to be divided in proportion to the length of time served. It is, however, to be borne in mind that those who enlisted under the act of 1864, c„ *190227, are precluded by tbe terms of their enlistment from claiming any additional bounty. Canwell v. Canton, 63 Maine, 304.

Defendants defaulted, and to be heard in damages.

Walton, Barrows, Daneorth, Peters and Libbey, JJ., concurred.