Service by an officer of the navy as an enlisted man in the
marine corps is to be credited to him in calculating his longevity
pay under the Act of March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 472, 473, c. 97.
The marine corps is a military body primarily belonging to the
navy and under control of the Naval Department, with liability to
be ordered to service in connection with the army, and in that case
under the command of army officers.
This was an appeal from the Court of Claims. The case is stated
in the opinion of the court.
Page 120 U. S. 250
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff brought her suit as administratrix of the estate
of George Dunn, her husband, who died on the 29th of September,
1884, to recover the difference between what was paid her and what
she claimed should have been paid on account of his service as
gunner in the navy from the 11th day of April, 1878, until the 10th
day of December, 1883. The Court of Claims gave her a judgment for
$2,238.10. This judgment was rendered upon the following finding of
facts:
"1. George Dunn, the claimant's intestate, was appointed a
gunner in the navy April 11, 1871, and served as such until January
1, 1883. He was subsequently retired, and has since died."
"2. Prior to his appointment in the navy, he had served in the
marine corps. He entered this corps first June 10, 1843, in the
eleventh year of his age, as a boy bound for ten years and
twenty-two days to learn music, and June 22, 1844, was rated as a
fifer; discharged September 8, 1848."
"Reenlisted September 9, 1848, for four years; discharged June
8, 1849, by order of the Secretary of the Navy, as a minor."
"Reenlisted August 10, 1849, for four years as a fifer;
discharged June 9, 1853."
"On the same day, to-wit, June 9, 1853, he reenlisted for four
years as a fifer; discharged April 1, 1854, under a surgeon's
certificate."
"Reenlisted August 31, 1854, for four years as a fifer;
discharged February 24, 1857, under a surgeon's certificate."
"Reenlisted May 19, 1857, for four years as a fifer; discharged
September 1, 1862, under a surgeon's certificate."
"The times of actual service from his first enlistment, June 10,
1843, to his last discharge, September 1, 1862, amounts to sixteen
years five months and twenty-six days. "
Page 120 U. S. 251
"3. Between the dates of his first enlistment and September 3,
1853, he served on board United States vessels of war, under the
command of navy officers, for five years and two months. Where and
under what command the remainder of his service was rendered does
not appear."
"
Conclusions of Law"
"Upon the foregoing findings of facts, the court decides as
conclusion of law --"
"That the sixteen years five months and twenty-six days of
service shown in Finding 2 to have been rendered by claimant's
intestate as an enlisted man in the marine corps should be credited
to him in calculating longevity pay under the Act of March 3, 1883,
22 Stat. 473. By so crediting this service, the claimant is
entitled to recover the sum of $2,238.10."
The controversy arises upon the construction to be given to the
following clause in the act making appropriation for the naval
service, passed March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 473. Section 1 of that
statute makes provision for the payment of the officers of the
navy, of which George Dunn, the plaintiff's intestate, was one at
that time. After reciting the officers, clerks, and other persons,
including naval cadets, whose compensation is embraced in the
aggregate sum of $300,000, the section uses this language:
"And all officers of the navy shall be credited with the actual
time they may have served as officers or enlisted men in the
regular or volunteer army or navy, or both, and shall receive all
the benefits of such actual service in all respects in the same
manner as if all said service had been continuous, and in the
regular navy in the lowest grade having graduated pay held by such
officer since last entering the service."
The plaintiff asserted that in adjusting her claim for her
husband's service with the accounting officers of the department,
she was entitled to the benefit of this provision on account of the
service found to have been rendered by him in the second
subdivision of the facts as found by the court. These accounting
officers refused to make this allowance because,
Page 120 U. S. 252
as they said, the services thus rendered were in the marine
corps, and not in the army or navy.
It must be conceded that the marine corps, a military body in
the regular service of the United States, occupies something of an
anomalous position, and is often spoken of in statutes which
enumerate "the army, the navy, and the marine corps," or "the army
and the marine corps," or "the navy and the marine corps," in a
manner calculated and intended to point out that it is not
identical with either the army or the navy. And this argument is
the one very much pressed to show that service in the marine corps
is not service in the army or in the navy. On the other hand, the
services rendered by that corps are always of a military character,
and are rendered as part as the duties to be performed by either
the army or the navy. If there are services prescribed for that
corps by the statutes of the United States or the regulations of
either the army or the navy which are not performed in immediate
connection with the army or the navy and under the control of the
heads of the army or navy, either civil or military, we have not
been made aware of it. The military establishment of this country
is divided by the general laws of the United States into the army
and the navy, and over each of these one of the great heads of
departments, called "secretaries," is appointed to preside to
manage and to administer its affairs. The administrative functions
of the executive are mostly under the President, distributed and
allotted among the seven great departments at the head of each of
which is a minister for that department. Such is the theory of the
distribution of executive administration established by the
statutes of the United States.
The marine corps is a military body, designed to perform
military services, and while they were not necessarily performed on
board ships, their active service in time of war is chiefly in the
navy and accompanying or aiding naval expeditions. In time of
peace, they are located in navy yards mainly, although occasionally
they may be used in forts and arsenals belonging more immediately
to the army. The statutes of the United States, in prescribing the
duties which they may be required
Page 120 U. S. 253
to perform, have not been very clear in any expression which
goes to show how far these services are to be rendered under the
control of the officers of the navy or of the army. It is clear
that they may be ordered to service in either branch, but we are of
opinion that, taking all these statutes and the practice of the
government together, they are a military body primarily belonging
to the navy and under the control of the head of the Naval
Department, with liability to be ordered to service in connection
with the army, and in that case under the command of army
officers.
Section 1599 of the Revised Statutes of the United States enacts
that no person under twenty or over twenty-five years of age shall
be appointed from civil life as a commissioned officer of the
marine corps until his qualifications for such service have been
examined and approved under the directions of the Secretary of the
Navy, and § 1600, immediately following, provides that all marine
officers shall be credited with the length of time that they have
been employed as officers or enlisted men in the volunteer service
of the United States. Sections 1613-1616 very clearly place the
noncommissioned officers, musicians, or privates of the marine
corps under the orders of the Secretary of the Navy with reference
to their performance in the capitol grounds or the President's
grounds and with reference to their rate of pay and their rations.
Section 1621 declares that the marine corps shall at all times be
subject to the laws and regulations established for the government
of the navy except when detached for service with the army by order
of the President, and when so detached, shall be subject to the
rules and articles of war prescribed for the government of the
army. Section 1623, which relates to the retirement of officers
with rank and pay, enacts that in the case of an officer of the
marine corps, the retiring board shall be selected by the Secretary
of the Navy, under the direction of the President. Two-fifths of
the board shall be selected from the medical corps of the navy and
the remainder from the officers of the marine corps.
It seems to us that these provisions of the Revised Statutes,
bringing together the enactments of Congress on the subject
Page 120 U. S. 254
of the marine corps, show that the primary position of that body
in the military service is that of a part of the navy, and its
chief control is placed under the Secretary of the Navy, there
being exceptions, when it may, by order of the President or someone
having proper authority, be placed more immediately, for temporary
duty, with the army and under the command of the superior army
officers.
This view of the subject was taken by this Court in the case of
Wilkes v.
Dinsman, 7 How. 89. Dinsman was a private in the
marine corps under Commodore Wilkes in the exploring expedition,
and, his term of service having expired, he entered into a contract
for reenlistment to serve until the return of the vessel. The act
which authorized his reenlistment applied to seaman and to service
of anybody enlisted for the navy. Dinsman was subjected to severe
discipline by the orders of Commodore Wilkes, for which he brought
this suit in the nature of an action of trespass, and alleged that
after the expiration of his service he was not lawfully reenlisted,
as he was not a seamen when enlisted for the navy by reason of his
being in the marine corps. The Court examined into this question
and held that he belonged at that time to the navy, saying, among
other things:
"Though marines are not in some senses 'seamen,' and their
duties are in some respects different, yet they are, while employed
on board public vessels, persons in the naval service, persons
subject to the orders of naval officers, persons under the
government of the naval code as to punishment, and persons amenable
to the Navy Department. Their very name of 'marines' indicates the
place and nature of their duties generally. And besides the
analogies of their duties in other countries, their first creation
here to serve on board ships expressly declared them to be a part
'of the crews of each of said ships.' Act March 27, 1794, 1 Stat.
350, § 4. Their pay was also to be fixed in the same way as that of
the seamen. § 6, p. 351. So it was again by the Act of April 27,
1798, 1 Stat. 552. And they have ever since been associated with
the navy except when specially detailed by the President for
service in the army. . . . Thus paid, thus serving, and thus
governed like and with the navy, it is
Page 120 U. S. 255
certainly no forced construction to consider them as embraced in
the spirit of the act of 1837 by the description of persons
'enlisted for the navy.'"
And referring to the Act of June 30, 1834, the provision of
which is found in § 1621 of the Revised Statutes,
"that the said corps shall at all times be subject to and under
the laws and regulations which are or may hereafter be established,
for the better government of the navy,"
the opinion says that this strengthens the conclusion of the
court, and that that corps thus in some respects became still more
closely identified with the navy.
Whatever view may be taken, it cannot be considered as a
distinct military organization, independent of the departments of
the army and navy and under the supervision and control of neither
of them, having no superior outside of its own officers except the
President. Such a position is at war with the whole policy of the
distribution of power among the executive departments, as we have
already shown, and while it may be true that it is not so
exclusively a part of the navy as ships and navy yards are, yet its
general supervision and control remain with the Navy
Department.
We think that the act of 1883, under which this suit is brought,
providing for a credit for the actual time of service in the army
or navy, or both, is comprehensive enough to include the services
of George Dunn, recited in the second finding of the court, as they
must have been rendered either in the one or the other -- either in
the army or the navy -- and if rendered in either or part in one
and part in the other, they still entitle the claimant to receive
compensation on the basis of services coming within the
statute.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is affirmed.