Clark v. Inhabitants of Tremont

83 Me. 426 | Me. | 1891

Libbey, J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant town the sum of two hundred dollars, which he alleges the town at its annual meeting in March, 1888, voted to pay him for damage to his horse, received as he alleges through a defect in the highway in said town. The vote upon which his action is brought is as follows : " Voted to pay H. H. Clark two hundred dollars ($200,) for damage done his horse in April last in District No. 8.”

. It is not claimed by the plaintiff that he gave to the municipal officers of the town any notice in writing of the injury to his horse, and of his claim for damages, as reqrdred by the statute ; so that the claim against the town for damages Avas Avithout any legal Aralidity. Nothing had been done to render the toAvn liable for damages. At the time when the vote AAras passed, it is not claimed hei’e that the legal liability existed against the town. And the question presented is AArhether such a vote by a town Avhen no legal claim exists,— Avhen no controversy exists between the plaintiff and the town as to the legal liability,— is binding upon the town so that an action may be maintained upon it.

When a real 1 controversy exists betiveen a man and a town in regard to the facts necessary to lie shown to create a liability on the part of the toAvn, or the law that may arise upon the facts, the toAvn may bind itself by its Arote to compromise the existing controversy upon any question within its corporate powers. But where no controversy exists betivcen the toAvn and an individual as to existing facts necessary to be shoAvn, or upon the law involved, a toAvn cannot by its vote bind itself by giving any particular sum to be raised by taxation upon its inhabitants, because it would be a mere gratuity, entirely outside of the poAver of the majority, and would have no binding force. So that the question involved here is Avhether there Avas a real *429controversy between the plaintiff and the town in regard to the facts necessary to be shown by the plaintiff to constitute a legal liability on the part of the town.

To create such legal liability for damages resulting to person or property by reason of a defect in a highway, one of the essential facts necessary to be proved by the plaintiff is that he gave notice in writing to the municipal officers of the town, within fourteen days after the injury, stating the place where the accident occurred, the defect that had caused it, the nature and extent of his injuries and his claim for damages. Without such notice in writing, no liability exists. Here it is not claimed that the plaintiff claimed as matter of fact that any such notice had been given. There was no controversy, then, over an essential fact which must have been proved by the plaintiff to constitute a liability on the part of the town. The plaintiff in his testimony does not pretend that he made any claim to the town that he had given the notice required by the statute. Whatever claim he presented was presented without any claim of existing facts necessary to support it. Whatever vote was passed, then, giving to him any sum was passed without any controversy between the parties as to the legal liability of the town, and must be held to be a gratuity, voted by the majority to be satisfied by a tax upon the property of the inhabitants of the town. This was beyond the powers of the town and is not binding. Upon this point see Matthews v. Westboro, 131 Mass. 521; Same v. Same, 134 Mass. 555. The whole doctrine in regard to the power of the town to bind its inhabitants by a vote, like the one involved here, is fully discussed by this court in Thorndike v. Camden, 82 Maine, 39. And we think the doctrine therein declared is decisive of this case. Nonsuit to stand.

Peters, C. J. Virgin, Emery, Foster and White house, JJ., concurred.
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