A remission by the Secretary of the Treasury, under Rev.Stat. §
5294, of penalties incurred by a steam vessel for taking on board
an unlawful number of passengers is effectual to destroy all
liability in the suit where the remission is applied for before a
suit
in rem brought for the penalties against the vessel
by an informer is tried.
The practice of granting remissions of pecuniary penalties and
forfeitures by officers other than the President, sanctioned by
statute and acquiescence for nearly a century, as a valid exercise
of authority, and no invasion of the power of pardon granted by the
Constitution to the President, is too firmly established to be
questioned.
This was a libel filed by Norman H. Pollock against the
Steamboat
Laura, &c., to recover penalties for the
violation of Rev.Stat. § 4465. The facts which make the case are
stated in the opinion of the Court. The libel was dismissed in the
district court. An appeal was taken to the circuit court, where it
was again dismissed. The libellant appealed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The statutes regulating the transportation of passengers by
steam vessels on such of the waters of the United States as are
common highways of commerce, or are open to general or competitive
navigation -- other than public vessels of this county, vessels of
other countries, and canal boats propelled in whole or in part by
steam -- provide that every certificate of inspection granted to
steamers carrying passengers, other than ferry boats, shall show
the number of passengers of each class for whom the steamer has
accommodations, and whom it can carry with prudence and safety;
that it shall not be lawful to
Page 114 U. S. 412
take on board a greater number of passengers than is stated in
the certificate of inspection, and that
"for every violation of this provision the master or owner shall
be liable, to any person suing for the same, to forfeit the amount
of passage money and ten dollars for each passenger beyond the
number allowed."
Rev.Stat. §§ 4399, 4400, 4464, 4465; Act of Feb. 28, 1871, 16
Stat. 440, 454. These penalties are declared to be a lien upon the
offending vessel. Section 4469. Another section in the same title
provides:
"If any vessel propelled in whole or in part by steam be
navigated without complying with the terms of this title, the owner
shall be liable to the United States in a penalty of $500 for each
offense, one-half for the use of the informer, for which sum the
vessel so navigated shall be liable, and may be seized and
proceeded against by way of libel in any district court of the
United States having jurisdiction of the offense."
§ 4499.
The libel in this case was filed by the appellant to enforce a
lien in his favor upon a steam vessel the class to which the above
regulations apply for penalties amounting to the sum of $5,661
which, it is claimed, accrued to the appellant as the person suing
for them by reason of the transportation on that vessel at certain
specified times of a larger number of passengers than its
certificate of inspection permitted.
Before the trial in the district court, the owner of the vessel,
a corporation which had intervened, filed an amended answer setting
up in bar of the further prosecution of the suit a warrant in due
form by the Secretary of the Treasury remitting to the appellee
"all the right, claim, and demand of the United States, and of
all others whatsoever, to said forfeiture of passage money and
penalties, on payment of costs, if any there be."
The provision of the statute under which this warrant of
remission was issued is in these words:
"The Secretary of the Treasury may, upon application therefor,
remit or mitigate any fine or penalty provided for in laws relating
to steam vessels, or discontinue any prosecution to recover
penalties denounced in such laws, excepting the penalty of
imprisonment or of removal from office, upon such
Page 114 U. S. 413
terms as he, in his discretion, shall think proper, and all
rights granted to informers by such laws shall be held subject to
the Secretary's power of remission except in cases where the claims
of any informer to the share of any penalty shall have been
determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, prior to the
application for the remission of the penalty, and the Secretary
shall have authority to ascertain the facts upon all such
applications, in such manner and under such regulations as he may
deem proper."
Rev.Stat. § 5294. The costs having been taxed and paid into
court, the libel was by order of the court dismissed.
Pollock
v. Steamboat Laura, 5 F. 133. Upon appeal to the circuit
court, the decree was affirmed, that court concurring with the
district court in holding that the remission by the Secretary of
the Treasury discharged all liability for the penalties.
The
Laura, 8 F. 612.
The warrant of remission, it is contended by the libellant, is
without legal effect and should have been disregarded because the
statute upon which it rests is in conflict with the clause of the
Constitution investing the President with power "to grant reprieves
and pardons for all offenses against the United States, except in
cases of impeachment." The argument advanced in support of this
position, briefly stated, is that the power of the President to
grant pardons includes the power to remit fines, penalties, and
forfeitures imposed for the commission of offenses against, or for
the violation of the laws of, the United States; that such power is
in its nature exclusive, and that its exercise in whatever form by
any subordinate officer of the government is an encroachment upon
the constitutional prerogative of the President.
It is not necessary to question the soundness of some of these
propositions. It may be conceded that except in cases of
impeachment and where fines are imposed by a coordinate department
of the government for contempt of its authority, the President,
under the general unqualified grant of power to pardon offenses
against the United States, may remit fines, penalties, and
forfeitures of every description arising under the
Page 114 U. S. 414
laws of Congress, and equally that his constitutional power in
these respects cannot be interrupted, abridged, or limited by any
legislative enactment. But is that power exclusive in the sense
that no other officer can remit forfeitures or penalties incurred
for the violation of the laws of the United States? This question
cannot be answered in the affirmative without adjudging that the
practice in reference to remissions by the Secretary of the
Treasury and other officers, which has been observed and acquiesced
in for nearly a century, is forbidden by the Constitution. That
practice commenced very shortly after the adoption of that
instrument, and was perhaps suggested by legislation in England
which, without interfering with, abridging, or restricting the
power of pardon belonging to the Crown, invested certain
subordinate officers with authority to remit penalties and
forfeitures arising from violations of the revenue and custom laws
of that country. Stat. 27 Geo. III, c. 32;
see also Stat.
51 Geo. III, c. 96, and 54 Geo. III, c. 171.
By an act passed March 3, 1797, 1 Stat. 506, the Secretary of
the Treasury was authorized to mitigate or remit any fine, penalty,
forfeiture, or disability arising from any law providing for the
laying, levying, or collecting duties or taxes, or any law
concerning the registering and recording of ships or vessels, or
the enrolling or licensing ships or vessels employed in the
coasting trade or fisheries or regulating the same if in his
opinion the same was incurred without willful negligence or
fraudulent intention by the person or persons subject to the same.
He was also authorized to direct a prosecution instituted for the
recovery thereof to cease and be discontinued upon such terms and
conditions as he deemed reasonable and just. This act expired by
limitation at a designated time. But by an Act passed February 11,
1800, it was revived, to continue in force without limitation as to
time. 2 Stat. 7, c. 6. From the adoption of the Constitution to the
present moment, Congress has asserted its right, by statute, to
invest the Secretary of the Treasury and other officers of the
executive branch of the government with power to remit fines,
penalties, and forfeitures imposed for the violation of the laws of
the United
Page 114 U. S. 415
States.
* And in none of
the cases in this Court or in the circuit and district courts of
the United States involving the operation or effect of such
warrants of remission was it ever suggested or intimated that the
legislation was an encroachment upon the President's power of
pardon -- so far, at least, as it invested the Secretary of the
Treasury or other officers with authority to remit pecuniary
penalties and forfeitures. Indeed, the case of
United
States v. Morris, 10 Wheat. 246, may be regarded as
a direct adjudication in favor of the validity of that part of the
act of 1797, brought forward in all of the subsequent statutes upon
the same subject, which confers upon the Secretary the power to
remit fines, penalties, and forfeitures.
In that case -- which involved the right to a share in a
forfeiture declared by statute -- the question related to the power
of the Secretary under that act, after final sentence of
condemnation and judgment for the forfeiture accruing under the
revenue laws, to remit the forfeiture. The Court held that the
power could be exercised under that act at any time before the
money was actually paid over to the collector for distribution. It
was said:
"The authority of the Secretary to remit at any time before
condemnation of the property seized is not denied on the part of
the plaintiff [the officer claiming the forfeiture], and it cannot
be maintained that Congress has not the power to vest in this
officer authority to remit after condemnation, and the only inquiry
would seem to be whether this has been done by the act referred
to."
Evidently the Court and the eminent counsel who appeared in that
case accepted it as a proposition not open to discussion that the
power of the President to pardon for offenses did not preclude
Congress from giving the Secretary of the Treasury authority to
remit penalties and
Page 114 U. S. 416
forfeitures. Touching the objection now raised as to the
constitutionality of the legislation in question, it is sufficient
to say, as was said in an early case, that the practice and
acquiescence under it,
"commencing with the organization of the judicial system,
affords an irresistible answer and has indeed fixed the
construction. It is a contemporary interpretation of the most
forcible nature. This practical exposition is too strong and
obstinate to be shaken or controlled. Of course the question is at
rest, and ought not now to be disturbed."
Stuart v.
Laird, 1 Cranch 308. The same principle was
announced in the recent case of
Lithographic Co. v.
Sarony, 111 U. S. 57,
where a question arose as to the constitutionality of certain
statutory provisions reproduced from some of the earliest statutes
enacted by Congress. The Court said:
"The construction placed upon the Constitution by the first act
of 1790 and the act of 1802 by the men who were contemporary with
its formation, many of whom were members of the convention which
framed it, is of itself entitled to very great weight, and when it
is remembered that the rights thus established have not been
disputed during a period of nearly a century, it is
conclusive."
See also Cooley v. Board of
Wardens, 12 How. 315;
Martin v.
Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304;
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264.
It is, however, insisted that if the statute in question is
constitutional, it cannot be construed as giving the Secretary of
the Treasury the power to remit a penalty after a suit for its
recovery has been instituted by a private person. In support of
this position, we are referred to numerous authorities which it is
claimed hold that the test of what may be done under the power of
pardon granted by our Constitution is what the King of England
could do by virtue of his pardoning power at the time of the
separation from that country, and that he could not grant a pardon
to the injury of a subject, and therefore could not remit a penalty
after suit by a private person to recover it. It is quite true, as
declared in
United States v.
Wilson, 7 Pet. 160, that since the power to
pardon
"had been exercised from time immemorial by the executive of
that nation whose language is our language, and to whose judicial
institutions ours
Page 114 U. S. 417
have a close resemblance, we adopt their principles respecting
the operation and effect of a pardon."
But that principle has no possible application to the present
case, for the statute under which the libellant proceeds, and
without which he would have no standing in court, declares in terms
that "all rights granted to informers" -- and the libellant is
plainly of the class intended to be described -- shall be held
"subject to the Secretary's power of remission except in cases
where the claims of any informer to the share of any penalty shall
have been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction prior to
the application for the remission of the penalty."
If the libellant had, by virtue of his suit, an inchoate
interest in such penalties, that interest was acquired subject to
the power of the Secretary to destroy it by a remission applied for
before the right is ascertained and established by the judgment of
the proper court.
The decree below is
Affirmed.
* 1 Stat. 122, c. 12;
ib., 275, c. 35; 2 Stat. 454, c.
8, § 6;
ib., 502, c. 66, § 14;
ib., 510, c. § 12;
ib., 701, c. 49, § 4; 3 Stat. 92, c. 1, § 14;
ib., 617, c. 14, § 3;
ib., 739, c. 21, § 35; 9
Stat. 593, c. 21, § 3; 11 Stat. 95, c. 159, § 10; 12 Stat. 257, c.
3, § 8;
ib., 271, c. 10, § 3;
ib., 405, c. 81, §
4;
ib., 737, c. 76, § 1; 13 Stat. 198, c. 164, § 8; 14
Stat. 169, c. 184, § 63; 15 Stat. 242, c. 273, § 8; 16 Stat. 179,
c. 185, § 9; 17 Stat. 325, c. 335, § 316; 18 Stat. 190, c. 391, §
18; Rev.Stat. §§ 2858, 3001, 3078, 3115, 3220, 3412, 3461,
5292-5294.