A clerk in the office of the President of the United States, who
is also appointed to be the clerk of a committee of Congress and
who performs the duties of both positions, is entitled to receive
the compensation appropriated and allowed by law for each.
Page 120 U. S. 127
Sections 1763, 1764, and 1765 of the Revised Statutes have no
application to the case of two distinct offices, places, or
employments, each with its own duties and compensation, but both
held by one person at the same time.
This was a suit to recover salary withheld. The case is stated
in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Saunders, the appellee in this case, recovered against the
United States in the Court of Claims a judgment for $1,627, from
which the United States appealed. The recovery was for the salary
of the claimant as clerk of the Committee on Commerce of the House
of Representatives, from the fourteenth day of March, 1885, to the
seventh day of January, 1886 at the rate of $2,000 per annum.
Mr. Saunders held this place from the 1st day of July, 1884,
when he was appointed, up to the 7th day of January, 1886, when his
successor was appointed. He was paid the compensation up to the
14th of March, 1885, and for the time between that and the 7th of
January, 1886, the Comptroller refused to pay him. The various
appropriation acts, including the one which would cover the period
now in question, had all made appropriations for compensation for
the clerk of the Committee on Commerce. The ground upon which
payment is resisted by the United States is that the claimant was,
on the 14th day of March, 1885, appointed a clerk in the Office of
the President of the United States, since which time he has
continued to perform the duties of that office, and receive its
salary. The Comptroller, in his decision refusing to allow the
claim, places his objection upon § 1765, Rev.Stat., and upon
the opinion of Attorney General Black in regard to extra pay and
double compensation, delivered in 1857. 9 Opinions Attorney General
123. Section 1765 is found in immediate connection with
Page 120 U. S. 128
several other sections on the same subject, of which the two
immediately preceding may be considered to some extent
in pari
materia. They are as follows:
"SEC. 1763. No person who holds an office the salary or annual
compensation attached to which amounts to the sum of two thousand
five hundred dollars shall receive compensation for discharging the
duties of any other office unless expressly authorized by law."
"SEC. 1764. No allowance or compensation shall be made to any
officer or clerk by reason of the discharge of duties which belong
to any other officer or clerk in the same or any other department,
and no allowance or compensation shall be made for any extra
services whatever which any officer or clerk may be required to
perform, unless expressly authorized by law."
"SEC. 1765. No officer in any branch of the public service or
any other person whose salary, pay, or emoluments are fixed by law
or regulations shall receive any additional pay, extra allowance,
or compensation, in any form whatever, for the disbursement of
public money, or for any other service or duty whatever, unless the
same is authorized by law, and the appropriation therefor
explicitly states that it is for such additional pay, extra
allowance, or compensation."
Some stress is laid in the letter of the Comptroller on the
proposition that the clerkship to the committee is not an office in
contemplation of the Constitution of the United States and the law,
and the decision in
United States v. Germaine,
99 U. S. 508, is
relied upon in support of that proposition. We do not think it
important to decide in this case whether such a clerkship is an
office within the meaning of these sections of the law and the
Constitution, because §§ 1764 and 1765 both include in
their prohibition officers, clerks, and other persons. The
proposition of the Comptroller that the clerk is not an officer is
made to meet his concession that a person who holds two distinct
compatible offices may lawfully receive the salary of each.
The general question here raised has been much discussed in the
opinions of the attorneys general and in the decisions of
Page 120 U. S. 129
this Court. This § 1765, mainly relied upon by the
government, is taken from two statutes, the first passed March 3,
1839, 5 Stat. 349, and the second, August 23, 1842, 5 Stat. 510.
This opinion of Attorney General Black seems to be in conflict with
the principles laid down by his predecessors, and is materially
modified, if not overruled, on the point mainly in question here,
by his opinion in the case of J. P. Brown, on page 507 of the same
volume. In
Heiro's Case, 5 Opinions Attys.Gen. 765,
Attorney General Crittenden held that these two acts of 1839 and
1842
"were intended to fence against arbitrary extra allowances in
each particular case, but not applying to distinct employments,
with salaries affixed to each by law or regulation."
The case before us comes within the terms of this language,
which is further confirmed by the fact that he regarded the act of
1850 as prohibiting a person "from receiving the salary of an
office which he does not hold, and not against his receiving the
salaries of two offices which he does legitimately hold," and we do
not see that there is any distinction between emoluments received
for two distinct employments, whether offices or not, the salaries
of which are distinct, and the services rendered distinct, both
appointments being held by the same person, as in this case. We are
of opinion that, taking these sections all together, the purpose of
this legislation was to prevent a person holding an office or
appointment for which the law provides a definite compensation by
way of salary or otherwise, which is intended to cover all the
services which as such officer he may be called upon to render,
from receiving extra compensation, additional allowances, or pay
for other services which may be required of him either by act of
Congress or by order of the head of his department or in any other
mode, added to or connected with the regular duties of the place
which he holds, but that they have no application to the case of
two distinct offices, places, or employments, each of which has its
own duties and its own compensation, which offices may both be held
by one person at the same time. In the latter case, he is, in the
eye of the law, two officers or holds two places or appointments,
the functions of which are separate
Page 120 U. S. 130
and distinct, and, according to all the decisions, he is in such
case entitled to recover the two compensations. In the former case,
he performs the added duties under his appointment to a single
place, and the statute has provided that he shall receive no
additional compensation for that class of duties unless it is so
provided by special legislation. The case of
United States v.
Brindle, 110 U. S. 688, in
which an Indian agent received large additional compensation for
services connected with the sale of lands belonging to the Indians
of his agency, which was affirmed in this Court, was upon the
ground that these additional services were performed for the
benefit of the Indians, and the statute implied the payment of a
reasonable compensation for such services.
See also Converse v. United
States, 21 How. 463.
These views require the affirmance of the judgment of the Court
of Claims, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.