Court Opinion

ID: 8505076
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:17.571232+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:51.052523
License: Public Domain

Woods, J.
Several questions are presented by this case. 1. The Revised Statutes, chapter 93, section 7, prescribes the manner in which the sergeants shall be appointed, and it appears that the complainant and White-house were appointed in the manner so prescribed, were sworn into office, and entered upon the discharge of their appropriate official duties. But they had neither of them warrants under the hand of the captain, countersigned by the clerk of the company, as the statute requires.
But Whitehouse was not a mere usurper. He was in under color of a legal election, and Avas a sergeant defacto. His official acts were therefore sufficient, and their validity cannot be drawn in question in a controversy between other parties, Huntoon v. Kidder, 3 N. H. Rep. 482.
2. Was Whitehouse, by reason of his age, disqualified to hold the office of second sergeant in the company, and to serve the notice as ordered by the captain ?
He was not of an age to be required to do military duty. He could not have been legally enrolled in the company, nor of course have been required to accept an appointment, or to obey an order, either as a sergeant or as a private.
In State v. Leonard, 6 N. H. Rep. 435, the order was executed by one whose liability to be enrolled as a private was questioned, upon the ground that he had previously been enrolled as a private in another company. This was admitting the enlistment to have been free from exception — a personal privilege on the part of the private— *194and he did. not see fit to take advantage of it; and as he Was otherwise liable to be enrolled and fit to be enrolled, his execution of the order was deemed to have been sufficient.
But it may well admit of a question whether one who has not attained an age at which he is liable to be enrolled for military duty, is capable of holding a warrant or commission. It is not on the ground of personal privilege but of legal incapacity, that such are rejected from the ranks. Such are not capable of being de facto privates, any more than women and children are.
3. "Was the order sufficiently specific in not naming the town in which the parade was to be held? There is no evidence that there were more places than one, that could have been designated by the description contained in the order. One place within the limits of the company was well described. It is not to be presumed that any one would have looked for Barker’s store elsewhere. The place seems to have been sufficiently described.
4. But in one particular the proceedings were clearly defective. The return was not sufficient evidence that notice had been given to the defendant in sufficient time to answer the requirements of the law.
All returning officers are ministerial, and should set forth in their returns all the acts by them done, so that it may appear whether they have fully and correctly discharged the duty which they have undertaken to do, or not. They are not competent, in contemplation of law, to judge of the legality of a notice or service, and a return that a preeept has been legally served, or that the duty enjoined by a warrant has been duly performed, would clearly be insufficient. Perry v. Dover, 12 Pick. 206.
A return,by an officer, that “ after giving public notice of the time and place of sale, agreeably to law in such cases made and provided,” &c., was held to be a defective return. Wellington v. Gale, 12 Mass. 483.
*195So also a return by an officer, that “ after advertising, as the law directs, I this day sold at public vendue,” &c., was an insufficient return of a notice of sale, to pass an equity of redemption in real estate. Davis v. Maynard, 9 Mass. 242.
A return by an officer upon an execution that he had given the bail “a written notice, as by law directed,” was decided to be insufficient; and it was held that the return should state what notice was given. Goodwin v. Smith, 4 N. II. Rep. 29.
So also the certificate of the selectmen upon a warrant for a town meeting, in these words: “ March 12, 1822; lawfully posted up a true copy of the within articles,” was held to be insufficient proof that the meeting was legally warned. Prop. Cardigan v. Page, 6 N. II. Rep. 182.
The certificate of selectmen that a warrant for holding a town meeting “has been duly posted up more than fifteen days,” is not sufficient to show a legal notification of the meeting. It should state the place where and the time when the warrant was posted up. Nelson v. Pierce, 6 N. H. Rep. 194. In the same case it was held that an affidavit filed by a collector, that an advertisement of the lands of non-residents for sale for taxes had been posted up more than eight weeks, was, for the same cause, insufficient.
In the present case, the return is open to the same objection. It states that the notice was served “more than four days prior to the said day of training.” The day on which it was served ought to appear by the return, in order that it may appear what the officer has done. The service might, for anything that appears, have been made on Sunday. The form in which the return is made is objectionable, upon the ground that the party to be charged by it, and who has a remedy in case it is false, has a right to such particularity as will enable him to prove its inaccuracy, if any has been committed.
*196But, without assuming to point out, in any particular case, the possible mischiefs that might result from a departure from the exact degree of precision and particularity required in such returns, and in certificates of the acts of public officers, it is sufficient to refer to the cases in which it has been held that a degree of exactness was necessary and proper for the due protection of personal rights and of. public order, that has not been practiced in the present instance.
A return is designed to show what acts have been performed, and the order and manner in which they have been performed by the officer who makes the return. It is not enough that he has executed his duty in a manner that he deems due and sufficient. He must show what he has done, so that any deflection from the due and legal course of proceeding may be detected upon the face^of the return itself:
There must, for the reasons assigned, be

Judgment for the defendant.