138 Mass. 292 | Mass. | 1885
The plaintiff seeks to establish against the defendant town that James P. Williams, a pauper to whom necessary supplies were furnished by it, had acquired a settlement .therein under that portion of the Pub. Sts. e. 83, § 1, cl. 11, which gives such settlement to any one who was duly assigned as a part of the quota of any town, after having been enlisted and mustered into the military or naval service of the United States during the late civil war, and who duly served for not less than one year.
Under the earlier requisitions for troops, there was no occasion to assign to counties, cities, towns, or other territorial subdivisions, the number which constituted their due proportion of men to be furnished for the suppression of the rebellion, as voluntary enlistment sufficiently supplied the wants of the military establishment. The U. S. St. of February 24, 1864, recognized the obligation resting upon them as existing from the beginning, and provided for ascertaining, under the name of its quota, the proportion which belonged to such territorial subdivision, the number of men who had rendered military service therefrom, and thus the number it was liable still to furnish when any draft should be made. Bridgewater v. Plymouth, 97 Mass. 382. By the U. S. St. of July 4, 1864, which was intended further to regulate and provide for the enrolling and calling out the national forces, it was provided, in § 8, as follows:
*294 “ That all persons in the naval service of the United States who have entered said service during the present rebellion, who have not been credited to the quota of any town, district, ward, or State, by reason of their being in said service and not enrolled prior to February twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, shall be enrolled and credited to the quotas of the town, ward, district, or State, in which they respectively reside, upon satisfactory proof of their residence made to the Secretary of War.”
Under this section, a commission was appointed by the Secretary of War to ascertain what credits the State of Massachusetts and its different subdivisions were entitled to, and the Acting Assistant Provost-Marshal General for Massachusetts was directed to carry into immediate effect all the credits allowed by the commission, unless especial reference to the Secretary of War was necessary.'
The record of naval enlistments prepared by this commission, and the report of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts relating to this matter, which are public documents, were put in evidence without objection. Upon this list appeared the name of James P. Williams, which is that of the pauper, and against it was written the word “ Uxbridge,” which, without objection, a clerk from the office of the Adjutant General testified meant that he was apportioned to that town. It further appeared by the testimony of the same clerk that the word “ rendezvous ” under which was written the word “Portsmouth,” meant the place where the naval recruit enlisted, referring to the alleged pauper. The clerk testified that the words “ at N. Y. Oct. 9, ’62,” meant that a squad, of which Williams was one, was sent to New York on that day.
The defendant asked the presiding judge to rule, as matter of law, that, under the rule established by the commissioners for the assignment to.the quota, as appears by the Adjutant General’s report, Williams was not duly assigned to the town of Uxbridge; by which we understand that the defendant refers to the rule that only those were to be credited “ who had joined the service at some rendezvous in the State.”
The record of enlistments of the commissioners was prepared from the rolls of the ship Ohio, which was a receiving-ship for
It is further contended that there was no evidence that the pauper was ever enlisted and mustered into the naval service of the United States, so that he could be assigned to the defendant town as a part of its quota, under the Pub. Sts. e. 83, § 1, el. 11. The enlistment papers and muster roll were not produced, nor were authenticated copies of them. But the testimony of the pauper that he was enlisted, the facts that his name was found on the rolls of a ship of war as a recruit, that he was transferred from there on duty, that he performed various services described by him, and that his discharge shows that he had served for more than a year, furnished evidence upon which it might have been held that he was enlisted and mustered, as well as that he had served a year.
By the provisions of the statute, one who has left the service otherwise than by an honorable discharge does not acquire a settlement. The discharge paper in this case simply states that James P. Williams “has this day been discharged from the U. S. Ship Lancaster, and from the naval service.” His discharge was properly held to have been an honorable one, it not appearing to be otherwise.
The defendant contends, that, as by the U. S. St. of July 4, 1864, § 8, naval recruits are to be credited to the quota of the
Judgment for the plaintiff.