53 Vt. 610 | Vt. | 1881
On the plaintiff’s testimony the County Court ordered a verdict for the defendant. This was error if his testimony fairly tended to show a legal right of recovery on any ground. In such a case he would be entitled to have the jury pass upon the sufficiency of his evidence to establish his right of recovery. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that in 1871, 1872 and 1878 he was one of the selectmen of the defendant town, and as such, with the knowledge and approval of the other two selectmen, he, in 1871, procured for the town, of Polly Bug-bee, three hundred dollars, gave her an order therefor on the treasurer of the town, signed by him with his own name and that of his associate selectmen, and that he paid the money thus procured to the treasurer of the town, who received it for the town ; that subsequently the treasurer accepted the order, and paid ten dollars interest thereon ; that when settling with the treasurer in March, 1878, no credit to the town was found for this three hundred dollars; thereupon considerable excitement arose, a town meeting was called, a committee of investigation raised, who made an examination, and reported to an adjourned meeting that the plaintiff hired three hundred dollars of Polly C. Bugbee about March 9, 1871, and gave a town order for it, but they did not think he paid the money to the town treasurer, or that the town ever received any part of it. The town accepted and adopted the report; instructed the other selectmen and town agent to take advice of counsel, and measures to protect the town, and if so advised, to direct the treasurer not to pay the order nor any part of it. His testimony further tended to show that on the investigation, the other two selectmen of 1871 denied all knowledge of procuring the money, or giving the order; and that immediately after the action of the town, he was threatened with all sorts of suits and proceedings, even a prosecution for forgery, for signing the names of the other selectmen to the order being intimated, and informed that the town absolutely refused to pay the order ; that he then went to see Mrs. Bugbee, who wanted the money on the order, and that he paid her the money thereon, rather than to put her to trouble about it, preferring to lose it if he could not
The judgment of the County Court is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.