42 Vt. 423 | Vt. | 1869
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The objection to the vote, urged in argument based on a supposed difference between the vote and the warning, is not well founded. The objection urged in argument is that one is more comprehensive than the other in reference to the class of persons to whom bounties are contemplated to be paid. There is no such difference between “ bounties to supply the quota of the said town under the recent call of the President of the United States for three hundred thousand men to serve in the war,” and “ bounties to volunteers that may hereafter enlist for the war, under the recent call of the President of the United States, including the one that is understood has enlisted,” as to render the vote inoperative. As to the objection made at the trial that the vote was not an open vote, but limited in the number of men by the discretion of the selectmen in raising the money,, we think it is not well taken. That is not the true construction of the vote. Nor is the other objection, that the vote left it to the discretion of the selectmen whether to raise any men or not, and that bounties were to be paid only to such men as the selectmen should enlist, well founded. The warning contained two separate articles, .one to see whether the town would vote to pay the bounties; and the other, “.In case the town should vote to pay such bounties, to raise and provide means for the same.” This question of con-, struction of the vote arises out of the fact that the town at the meeting disposed of both these articles in one vote, by voting the bounties and instructing the selectmen to borrow a sum not exceeding three thousand dollars for that purpose. The vote specifies the amount of bounty to each volunteer and the time of
At'the close of the evidence, when the court enquired of the defendants’ counsel if they claimed there was any thing to be submitted to the jury, they claimed to go to the jury only upon the question whether, in fact, the town had notice of the plaintiff’s re-enlistment prior to January 12, 1864, and before the muster in of the ten men which the selectmen procured and caused to be mustered in. The last eight of these ten were mustered in, as tl^ defendants’ evidence tended to show, January 12, 1864. The court ruled that there was nothing in this point to be submitted to the jury, and to this the defendants excepted. It is difficult to see where the evidence is to be found in the case which would
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.