The sea pay given to officers of the navy by Rev.Stat. §
155G may be earned by services performed under orders of the Navy
Department in a vessel employed, by authority of law in active
service in bays, inlets, roadsteads, or other arms of the sea,
under the general restrictions, regulations,
Page 120 U. S. 47
and requirements that are incident or peculiar to service on the
high seas.
The authority of the head of an Executive Department to issue
orders and regulations under directions of the President to have
the force of law is subject to the condition that they conflict
with no act of Congress, and an order by the Secretary of the Navy
that a service shall not be a sea service which Congress has
directed shall be a sea service is invalid.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims. The
case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is whether certain services of the
appellee, a lieutenant in the navy of more than five years'
standing, were performed "at sea" within the meaning of § 1556
of the Revised Statutes. That section provides as follows:
"The commissioned officers and warrant officers on the active
list of the navy of the United States, and the petty officers,
seamen, ordinary seamen, firemen, coal heavers, and employees in
the navy shall be entitled to receive annual pay at the rates
herein stated, after their respective designations: . . .
Lieutenants, during the first five years after date of commission,
when at sea, $2,400; on shore duty, $2,000; on leave or waiting
orders, $1,600; after five years from such date, when at sea,
$2,600; on shore duty, $2,200; on leave or waiting orders,
$1,800."
By an order of the Secretary of the Navy, June 30, 1881, the
officer commanding the United States training ship
New
Hampshire, then at Norfolk, Virginia, was authorized to enlist
officers' stewards, cooks, and servants, such as were allowed for a
vessel with her complement of officers; the order declaring that
her officers "will be considered as attached to a vessel
commissioned for sea service, the same as other apprentice training
vessels." On the first day of April, 1882, Symonds,
Page 120 U. S. 48
in obedience to orders, assumed the post of executive officer of
the
New Hampshire, and thereafter discharged the duties of
that position, which were similar to those performed by executive
officers of cruising ships. He also discharged other duties of a
character more exacting and arduous than those on board of any
other class of naval vessels. There was no change in the nature of
his services after he reported for duty as executive officer of the
New Hampshire. He was required to have his quarters on
board, to wear his uniform, to mess on the vessel, and was not
permitted, by the rules of the service, to live with his family.
When he reported on board that ship, she was stationed at
Narragansett Bay, and, during most of his service thereon, was the
flagship of the training squadron.
On the seventh day of July, 1882, the then Secretary of the Navy
issued an order to the effect that
"On and after the first day of August next, the
New
Hampshire, the
Minnesota, the
Intrepid, and
the
Alarm will not be considered in commission for sea
service."
There was, however, no change in the status of the ship on or
after August, 1882, her equipment and complement of officers being
those of a cruising ship.
From April 1, 1882, to July 31, 1882, appellee was allowed sea
pay, and commutation of rations at thirty cents per day, but from
the latter date he was allowed only shore pay of an officer of his
grade, without rations or commutation therefor. This suit was
brought by appellee to recover the difference between pay for sea
and shore duty, as regulated by § 1556 of the Revised
Statutes.
Section 1571 of the Revised Statutes -- which is a reproduction
of the third section of an Act of June 1, 1860, increasing and
regulating the pay of the navy, 12 Stat. 27 -- provides that
"No service shall be regarded as sea service except such as
shall be performed at sea, under orders of a department, and in
vessels employed by authority of law."
It is not disputed that the services of Symonds were performed
under the orders of the Secretary of the Navy and in a vessel
employed by authority of law. If they were performed "at sea," his
compensation therefor is absolutely fixed by § 1556. Does the
statute confer upon the Secretary of the Navy, acting
Page 120 U. S. 49
alone or by direction of the President, the power to declare a
particular service to be shore service, if in fact it was performed
by the officer "when at sea," under the orders of the department,
and on a vessel employed by authority of law? By the navy
regulations of 1876, it was declared that
"Duty on board a seagoing vessel of the navy in commission, on
board a practice ship at sea, or on board a coast survey vessel
actually employed at sea, will be regarded by the Department as sea
service."
P. 85. Assuming that the first clause of that regulation
contemplates services at sea under the orders of the Department, in
a vessel employed with authority of law, it is clear that all the
different kinds of services described therein are services
performed at sea in the meaning of § 1556. But they are to be
deemed such not because the Secretary of the Navy has announced
that the department will so regard them, but because they are in
fact services performed at sea and not on shore. If the regulations
of 1876 had not recognized services "on board a practice ship at
sea" as sea services, the argument in behalf of the government
would imply that they could not be regarded by the courts, or by
the proper accounting officers, as sea services -- in other words,
that the Secretary of the Navy could fix, by order and
conclusively, what was and what was not sea service. But Congress
certainly did not intend to confer authority upon the Secretary of
the Navy to diminish an officer's compensation, as established by
law, by declaring that to be shore service which was in fact sea
service, or to increase his compensation by declaring that to be
sea service which was in fact shore service. The authority of the
Secretary to issue orders, regulations, and instructions, with the
approval of the President, in reference to matters connected with
the naval establishment is subject to the condition, necessarily
implied, that they must be consistent with the statutes which have
been enacted by Congress in reference to the navy. He may, with the
approval of the President, establish regulations in execution of or
supplementary to, but not in conflict with, the statutes defining
his powers or conferring rights upon others. The contrary has never
been held by this Court.
What we now say is entirely consistent with
Page 120 U. S. 50
Gratiot v. United
States, 4 How. 80, and
Ex Parte Reed,
100 U. S. 13, upon
which the government relies. Referring in the first case to certain
army regulations, and in the other to certain navy regulations,
which had been approved by Congress, the Court observed that they
had the force of law.
See also Smith v. Whitney,
116 U. S. 181.
In neither case, however, was it held that such regulations, when
in conflict with the acts of Congress, could be upheld. If the
services of Symonds were, in the meaning of the statute, performed
"at sea," his right to the compensation established by law for sea
service is as absolute as is the right of any other officer to his
salary as established by law. The same observations may be made in
reference o the order of the Secretary of the Navy of July 7, 1882,
which -- without modifying the previous order that Symonds should
perform the duties of executive officer of the New Hampshire --
declared that that ship would not be considered as in commission
for sea service after August 1, 1882. It does not appear that the
Secretary had any purpose by his order to affect the pay of the
officers of the ship as fixed by the statute. Other reasons
doubtless suggested the propriety or necessity of its being issued.
But his order is relied upon here as depriving Symonds of the right
to sea pay after the date last named. For the reasons stated, that
order could not convert the services of Symonds from sea services
into shore services, if they were in fact performed when "at
sea."
We concur in the conclusion reached by the Court of Claims --
namely that the sea pay given in § 1556 may be earned by
services performed under the orders of the Navy Department in a
vessel employed, with authority of law, in active service in bays,
inlets, roadsteads, or other arms of the sea, under the general
restrictions, regulations, and requirements that are incident or
peculiar to service on the high sea. It is of no consequence in
this case that the
New Hampshire was not, during the
period in question, in such condition that she could be safely
taken out to sea beyond the mainland. She was a training ship,
anchored in Narragansett Bay during the whole time covered by the
claim of appellee, and was subject to such
Page 120 U. S. 51
regulations as would have been enforced had she been put in
order and used for purposes of cruising, or as a practice ship at
sea. Within the meaning of the law, Symonds, when performing his
duties as executive officer of the New Hampshire, was "at sea."
Judgment affirmed.