An act of Congress specially referring to the Court of Claims a
paymaster's claim for credits and differences in his accounts with
the United States, and providing that the evidence of the claimant
may be received, and that, if the court shall be satisfied that
just and equitable grounds exist for credits
Page 116 U. S. 146
claimed by him, it shall make a decree setting forth the amount
for which he shall receive credit, confers no equity jurisdiction
upon that court, but only the ordinary jurisdiction of the subject
as a court of law, subject to be proceeded with as in ordinary
suits, and subject to the rules regulating appeals in ordinary
judgments.
This Court will not remand to the Court of Claims a case at law
with directions to return whether certain distinct propositions in
requests for findings of fact, presented to that court at the trial
of the case, are established and proved by the evidence, if it
appears that the object of the request to have it so remanded is to
ask this Court to determine questions of fact on the evidence.
This was a motion to order up evidence from the Court of Claims,
accompanied by an alternative motion to order that court to make
specific findings of fact. The facts which make the case are stated
in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion for an order on the Court of Claims "to
transmit to this Court all the evidence on which the cause was
heard and determined" in that court or, if such an order cannot be
made, that the cause be remanded
"with directions to make returns to this Court, whether or not
the evidence upon which said cause was heard and determined does or
does not establish and prove the several separate and distinct
propositions of fact contained in the requests for findings of fact
presented . . . to the said court before the trial of said cause,
and upon the motion for a new trial, or a rehearing of said cause,
that the said court shall be directed to find specifically all the
material facts involved in the case."
The suit was brought under the following act of Congress, passed
February 24, 1874, entitled "An act for the relief of Col. Daniel
McClure, Assistant Paymaster General:"
"
Be it enacted, etc., that the claims of Daniel McClure
Assistant Paymaster General, for credits and differences in his
accounts as paymaster, under his official bond dated March
Page 116 U. S. 147
2, 1859, shall be, and are hereby, referred to the Court of
Claims, with jurisdiction to hear and determine said claims. And if
the said court shall be satisfied from the evidence that any of the
moneys charged to him were not in fact received by him, or that
other just and equitable grounds exist for credits claimed by him,
it shall make a decree setting forth the amount to which the said
McClure shall be entitled to receive credit, upon which the proper
accounting officers of the Treasury shall allow him the amount so
decreed as a credit in the settlement of his accounts,
provided that the testimony of said McClure shall be
received in his own behalf by said court, and until the
determination of said cause the final adjustment of his said
accounts is suspended,
and provided further that an appeal
shall be allowed to either party as in other cases."
18 Stat. 531.
In his petition filed in the cause, McClure made three claims
for credit, to-wit: 1, for $1, 183.13, money on deposit to his
official credit as paymaster with the Assistant Treasurer of the
United States at New Orleans, which was seized by the insurgent
forces of the Confederate States and appropriated to their own use
without any fault on his part; 2, for $289.05 taken from his
possession by a military force acting for and in behalf of the
Confederate authorities, and 3, for $1,000, an overaddition made of
payrolls by his clerk, which in no manner inured to his personal
benefit. There were also three claims for differences between his
accounts and those of the United States, being for moneys charged
to him, which, as he alleged, were not in fact received, to-wit, 1,
$1,432.48, said to have been transferred to him by J. L. Hewitt; 2,
$25,000 by C. S. Stevenson, and 3, $4,993 by V. C. Hanna.
The Court of Claims has found as facts 1, that the $289.05 was
taken from McClure by an armed force in charge of one of the
commissioners of the State of Texas while it was in his hands as
government money, and 2, that the sum of $1,183.13 was turned over
by the Assistant Treasurer of the United States to the Confederate
States, while it was on deposit with him to the credit of McClure
as paymaster. As to the sum of $1,000, it is found that McClure
stated an account showing
Page 116 U. S. 148
payments made to troops, and accompanied the same with vouchers,
one of which was overadded $1,000, and he got credit at the time
for the overaddition as for money paid out. As to the several items
of differences, it is found that the parties by whom the transfers
were respectively supposed to be made had each obtained a receipt
from McClure for the amount stated, and that they were allowed
credit therefor in settlement of their own accounts at the
Treasury. As to the moneys taken by the Confederate authorities,
the court was satisfied from the evidence that just and equitable
grounds existed for their allowance as credits. As to the
overaddition, the court was not satisfied from the evidence that
any just and equitable grounds existed for the credit thereof the
McClure, and as to the several amounts specified in the receipts
obtained by the different parties, the court was not satisfied from
the evidence that the moneys charged to McClure by the United
States were not in fact received by him, or that other just and
equitable grounds existed for giving him credit for these
amounts.
1. As to bringing up the evidence.
It is not pretended that this can be done unless the statute
under which the suit is brought takes the case out of the operation
of our rules regulating appeals from the Court of Claims. The
original act which gave the right of appeal from the Court of
Claims to this Court was passed March 3, 1863, and provided that
the appeals should be "under such regulations as the Supreme Court
may direct." 12 Stat. 766, c. 92, § 5. This provision is still
found in § 708 of the Revised Statutes. At the December term, 1865,
this Court adopted certain rules for the regulation of such
appeals, and Rule 1 was as follows:
"Rule 1. In all cases hereafter decided in the Court of Claims
in which, by the act of Congress, such appeals are allowable, they
shall be heard in the Supreme Court upon the following record, and
none other:"
"1. A transcript of the pleadings in the case, of the final
judgment or decree of the court, and of such interlocutory orders,
rulings, judgments, and decrees as may be necessary to a proper
review of the case."
"2. A finding of the facts in the case by said Court of
Page 116 U. S. 149
Claims, and the conclusions of law on said facts, on which the
court founds its judgment or decree."
"The finding of the facts and the conclusions of law to be
stated separately, and certified to this Court as part of record.
The facts so found are to be the ultimate facts or propositions
which the evidence shall establish, in the nature of a special
verdict, and not the evidence on which those ultimate facts are
founded.
See Burr v. Des Moines Co., 1
Wall. 102."
This rule was amended in some particulars at the December term,
1872, but not in a way to affect the present case. It has been in
force, substantially in its original form, from the time of its
adoption until now, and has always been strictly adhered to. Such
being the case, when Congress passes a special statute allowing a
suit to be brought in the Court of Claims, with a right of appeal
to this Court, the appeal will be governed by the rules applicable
to cases arising under the general jurisdiction of the Court unless
provision is made to the contrary.
In
Harvey v. United States, 105 U.
S. 671, the suit was brought under a statute passed
April 14, 1876, 19 Stat. 490, c. 279, which authorized the Court of
Claims
"to proceed in the adjustment of the accounts between the
claimants and the United Stated as a court of equity jurisdiction,
and may, if according to the principles of equity jurisprudence, in
its judicial discretion, reform said contract and render such
judgment as justice and right between the parties may require."
An appeal to this Court was also given, and we held that, as the
suit was to be in equity, the parties were entitled to an appeal in
equity, which should bring up for review the facts as well as the
law. But in
Tillson v. United States, 100 U. S.
43, where the court was "authorized and directed to . .
. ascertain, determine, and adjudge the amount equitably due said
firm, if any, for such loss or damage," we decided that
"the reference was made to the court, as a court, and not to the
judges as arbitrators. The determination is to be made according to
the fixed rules which govern that court in the adjudication of
causes, and not at the
Page 116 U. S. 150
discretion of the judges. The same principles of jurisprudence,
and the same statutory regulations as to practice, are to be
applied here that would be if the case had come into the court
under its general jurisdiction. It is to be ascertained and
determined what, if anything, is due the claimants from the
government, according to the rules of law applicable to the
settlement in that court of controversies between the government
and its citizens. . . . To our minds, the word 'equitably' means no
more than that the rules of law applicable to the case shall be
construed liberally in favor of the claimants."
This suit clearly comes within the principle of
Tillson's
Case. It is in the nature of a defense to an action at law
brought by the United States to recover the balance claimed to be
due upon the account as stated at the Treasury. The statute
requires the court to hear and determine judicially 1, whether the
disputed sums charged to McClure were in fact received by him, and
2, whether any other just or equitable grounds exist for the
credits claimed by him. The statute under which the Court of Claims
is organized would have been enough to give that court jurisdiction
of the claims for credit on account of the moneys seized by the
Confederate authorities. Rev.Stat. § 1059, clause 3, and § 1062.
But under that statute, McClure could not have given testimony in
his own behalf. The special act relieves him from that disability
and allows him to join his claims for other errors with his claims
for losses by capture, etc., and thus have the whole matter
determined in one suit, but, save as to his competency as a witness
and possibly an injunction to construe the rules of law liberally
in his favor, the practice of the court under its general
jurisdiction has not been altered.
Some stress was put in argument upon the use of the word
"decree" in the statute, and it was insisted that as this is a term
technically applicable to proceedings in equity, a suit in equity
must have been contemplated. To our minds, this word has no special
significance here. For in § 1062 of the Revised Statutes, where it
is provided that if, in a suit begun under clause 3 of § 1059 of
the Revised Statutes, the court ascertains that the
Page 116 U. S. 151
loss sued for had been without fault or negligence on the part
of the officer,
"it shall make a decree setting forth the amount thereof, and
upon such decree the proper accounting officers of the Treasury
shall allow to such officer the amount so decreed as a credit in
the settlement of his accounts,"
and it is evident that the draughtsman of the present statute
must have had the other before him when he was doing this part of
his work, and followed it for the sake of uniformity. We have never
known it to be contended that under the old law such a suit was to
be looked upon as a suit in equity. It is clear, therefore, that
this motion, in its first alternative, must be denied.
2. As to remanding the cause for further findings.
At the time of the promulgation of Rule 1, a copy of which has
already been given, reference was made to the case of
Burr v. Des Moines
Co., 1 Wall. 102, as indicating what the finding of
facts there provided for must contain. In that case, what was
called "an agreed statement of facts" appeared in the record, and
the question was as to whether it could be considered by this
Court. Upon this subject it was said:
"The statement of facts on which this Court will inquire if
there is or is not error in the application of the law to them is a
statement of the ultimate facts or propositions which the evidence
is intended to establish, and not the evidence on which those
ultimate facts are supposed to rest. The statement must be
sufficient in itself, without inferences or comparisons or
balancing of testimony, or weighing evidence, to justify the
application of the legal principles which must determine the case.
It must leave none of the functions of a jury to be discharged by
the court, but must have all the sufficiency, fullness, and
perspicuity of a special verdict. If it requires the Court to weigh
conflicting testimony, or to balance admitted facts, and deduce
from these the propositions of fact on which alone the legal
conclusion can rest, then it is not such a statement as this Court
can act upon."
In
United States v. Pugh, 99 U. S.
265, the suit was brought under the Abandoned and
Captured Property Act, and the main controversy was as to whether
the proceeds of the sale of the property had actually been paid
into the Treasury. There was
Page 116 U. S. 152
no direct proof to this effect, and the Court, instead of
stating positively in its findings that such a payment had been
made, set out all the circumstantial facts established by the
evidence tending to show a payment, and gave judgment against the
United States. When the case got here on appeal, it was claimed
that the findings were not sufficient to support the judgment
because it did not appear affirmatively that the proceeds of the
property had actually been paid into the Treasury, but we held
otherwise, because there was nothing left for us to determine but
the necessary legal effect of the circumstantial facts found, and
in doing so, we said
"that when the rights of the parties depend upon circumstantial
facts alone, and there is doubt as to the legal effect of the
facts, it is the duty of the court, when requested, to so frame its
findings as to put the doubtful question into the record. This
would not require us, on appeal, to decide upon the weight of
evidence. That is done in the court below when the particular fact
is found which the evidence tends to prove. The effect of mere
evidence stops when the fact it proves is established. After that,
the question is as to the effect of the fact, and when the evidence
in a case has performed its part, and brought out all the facts
that have been proved, these facts, thus established, are to be
grouped, and their legal effect as a whole determined."
But in
The Francis Wright, 105
U. S. 387, where the question was as to the kind of
facts of facts the court could be required to put in its findings,
we said it did not include "mere incidental facts which only amount
to evidence bearing on the ultimate facts of the case." Questions
depending on the weight of evidence must be conclusively settled
below.
Applying these rules to the present case, we find that, as to
the several disputed items of money charged against McClure, his
only defense is that he never received them. If received, he is
accountable. Upon the hearing, his receipt for each of the several
sums was produced. The genuineness of his signature was not denied
in any case, but he offered evidence tending to prove that he did
not in fact get the money. Against this, other evidence was offered
on the part of the government, and the question for determination
below was whether the
Page 116 U. S. 153
testimony in his behalf was sufficient to overcome the receipts
and the evidence in corroboration of them. The finding was against
him. What he wishes incorporated into the record now are the
incidental facts and circumstances testified to in his behalf,
which, when weighed as evidence, he thinks will overcome the
showing against him. In other words, he wishes the record so made
up that we can put on one side the receipts and the evidence in
support of them, and on the other the evidence on which he relies,
and determine which preponderates. Clearly there is nothing in
Pugh's Case which supports the right to any such findings.
In that case, there was no question of preponderance. There was no
"balancing of testimony or weighing of evidence." The court was not
required "to weigh conflicting testimony or balance admitted
facts." All that had to be done was to declare the law on
established facts all in harmony. Here, if the additional findings
asked for are sent up, the question for us to determine will be the
comparative weight, as evidence, of the facts found on one side
with those found on the other -- in other words, whether the
evidence offered on the part of McClure is sufficient to overcome
the effect as evidence of his receipts and the other testimony
against him. The rule contemplates no such practice. All we can do
is to declare the law upon facts which, so far as we are concerned,
must be taken to be undisputed.
As to the proposed findings, with a view to ascertaining the
existence of "just and equitable grounds for credits claimed," they
are clearly immaterial for the purpose of a judicial determination
of the rights of the parties. At most they would only show that
McClure had been compelled to conduct his business under very
unfavorable circumstances; that the amounts disbursed by him had
been large; that much of his business had necessarily been done by
his clerks, upon the accuracy of whose statements and calculations
he was compelled in a great measure to rely; that, with the
exception of the present differences, his accounts had always been
found correct; that he had sometimes given receipts in advance of
the time he had actually got the money, and by reason of the
limited facilities for transacting business in his office, it was
possible for a receipt to be
Page 116 U. S. 154
got without the money's being actually paid over; that there had
been great delay in advising him of the errors in his accounts, and
things of a like character. These are facts proper for the
consideration of Congress on an application by McClure for
legislative action in his favor, but, under the most liberal
construction of the rules which govern courts of justice in
determining the rights of parties, they fall far short of what is
necessary for affording him judicial relief.
The motion is denied.