15 Me. 460 | Me. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was subsequently drawn up by
To support this action it is necessary to prove the misconduct or neglect of the agent, and that in consequence of it, the plaintiffs suffered damage. The neglect charged, consists in permitting a default to be entered by agreement in an action brought by Leonard Blanchard against the town. Before the default was entered and judgment rendered, the town had at a legal meeting voted to authorize the selectmen to pay the claim. The neglect and injury now complained of consists in not resisting the payment of a claim, which the town had agreed to pay. This simple statement of the case is sufficient to shew, that the action can be maintained only upon some unusual view of the relation between principal and agent. The argument for the town rests the right to recover upon grounds which distinguish it from the ordinary relation in such cases. One of these is, that the agent of a town appointed according to the provisions of the statute, becomes an officer of the law and bound to perform his duties in prosecuting and defending suits according to law, whether in so doing he conforms to, or disobeys the instruction of the principal.- The statute providing for the appointment, does not prescribe their duties, or define their powers. It only gives them the right to represent their towns and perform such acts as their principals might perform by any other agency, which would legally represent them. And to ascertain the relative rights and duties of towns and their agents, reference must necessarily be had, as in other cases, to the laws of the land. And these laws decide, that the agent cannot act against the express will of the principal without subjecting himself to an action for such damages, as he may thereby have occasioned. It is not to be understood that the agent may be required to do an illegal or immoral act.
Another ground taken in the argument is, that the agent cannot be justified by the vote of the town, because the town had no-legal right to pass such a vote.
Upon the principle upon which this action can be maintained, the selectmen after paying a ’doubtful claim in obedience to the vote of the town, if it can afterward be proved to have been for objects for which the town was not authorized to expend money, may be subjected to pay damages for that very act of obedience.
The adoption of such a principle, now unknown to the law, would render the town incapable of the exercise of the powers granted or of performing the duties enjoined, as well as sanction the grossest injustice. To avoid an evil, as yét prospective or imaginary, the Court cannot depart from the well established principles of law regulating the rights and duties of principal and agent.
Nonsuit, confirmed.