On an examination of the face of the record in this case, it
appears that the amount due the United States is less than the
penalty of the bond given by defendant in error for the faithful
performance of his duties as an officer,
viz.,: $517.07,
and possibly a small amount of interest, and as the jurisdiction of
this Court in an action on such a bond depends upon the amount due
for the breach of the condition, the Court is without
jurisdiction.
The term "revenue law," when used in connection with the
jurisdiction of the courts of the United States, means a law
imposing duties on imports or tonnage, or a law providing in terms
for revenue -- that is to say, a law which is directly traceable to
the power granted to Congress by the Constitution "to lay and
collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises."
Section 844 Rev.Stat., requiring the clerk of a court of the
United States to pay into the Treasury any surplus of fees and
emoluments which his return slows to exist over and above the
compensation and allowances authorized by law to be retained by
him, is not a revenue law within the meaning of that clause of
§ 699 Rev.Stat. which provides for a writ of error without
regard to the sum or value in dispute "upon any final judgment of a
circuit court . . . in any civil action brought by the United
States for the enforcement of any revenue law thereof."
Motion to dismiss, with which was united a motion to affirm. The
case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought on the official bond of Clement Hugh Hill
as clerk of the District Court of the United States for the
District of Massachusetts, for "not properly accounting for all
moneys coming into his hands, as required by law, according to the
condition of said bond." The bond was in the penal sum of $20,000,
and in the original writ the damages were laid at $2,000. The bill
of exceptions shows that the controversy
Page 123 U. S. 682
in the suit was as to the liability of the clerk to account to
the United States for moneys received by him in naturalization
business. The questions involved are in many respects the same as
in
United States v. Hill, 120 U.
S. 169, though in some important particulars the two
cases differ.
Under the instructions of the court, the jury found a verdict
for the defendants on the 26th of July, 1887. On the 3d of August,
and before judgment, the writ was amended, with leave of the court,
by increasing the
ad damnum from $2,000 to $20,000. Then,
on the 24th of August, a judgment was entered in due form on the
verdict, "that the plaintiff take nothing by the writ." To reverse
that judgment, this writ of error was brought, which the defendants
now move to dismiss because the value of the matter in dispute does
not exceed $5,000. The motion is based upon the following statement
which appears as part of the bill of exceptions:
"This is an action upon the official bond of the defendants,
given by the defendant Hill as clerk of the district court for this
district. The pleadings are made a part of this bill of exceptions,
and may be referred to. The only breach of the bond relied upon was
that set out in the declaration of the failure of Hill to account
for all moneys received, and under this assignment of breach no
claim was made that the said Hill had neglected to account for any
other sums or moneys than those received by him in naturalization
cases. It appeared as a fact that the total amount of
naturalization fees received by the defendant Hill since the date
of former suit,
viz., December 4, 1884, and not accounted
for, was as follows:"
July to Dec., 1884 . . . . . . . . . . $2,720.58
1885 . . . . . . . . . . 1,146.50
1886 . . . . . . . . . . 2,325.00
Jan. to June, 1887 . . . . . . . . . . 838.00
"It also appeared that in 1884, adding the naturalization fees
to the other fees, the two together exceeded the clerk's maximum
allowance by the amount of $517.07, but since then, adding the two
together, the clerk has not received the maximum allowed him by
law. "
Page 123 U. S. 683
As early as
United States v.
McDowell, 4 Cranch 316, it was decided that in an
action on an official bond given for the faithful performance of
the duties of an office, our jurisdiction would depend on the
amount due for the breach of the condition, and not on the penal
sum. This is not denied in the argument of the Attorney General
submitted in opposition to this motion, but he insists (1) that it
does not appear legitimately on the face of this record that the
amount due is less than the penalty of the bond, and (2) that this
is a suit brought for the enforcement of a "revenue law" of the
United States, and therefore this Court has jurisdiction for the
review of the judgment, under § 699 of the Revised Statutes,
"without regard to the sum or value in dispute."
In support of the first objection, it is claimed that the
foregoing statement as to the amount due from the clerk is not
properly a part of the bill of exceptions. We cannot so understand
the record, which shows this entry: "The following is the bill of
exceptions presented to the plaintiffs, and allowed by the court,
before entry of judgment." Then, evidently as the file mark of the
paper, "Plaintiff's exceptions. Allowed August 24, 1887."
The paper itself, thus described and identified, began with the
statement given above, which was evidently intended as an admission
on both sides of the undisputed facts in the case, so that the
trial might be confined to the real matter in dispute, to-wit, the
liability of the clerk to account for moneys received in
naturalization business as part of his official emoluments. To show
this liability, notwithstanding the case
United States v. Hill
ubi supra, which had been decided on an agreed statement of
facts, the United States attorney offered to prove that
"Hill had received large sums of money as the ordinary and usual
fees upon the application of foreigners to be naturalized in the
district court of which he was clerk, and for the issuance of
certificates of naturalization, and for filing papers and
administration of oaths, and for other official acts required by
law in the naturalization in due manner
Page 123 U. S. 684
of foreigners."
In another part of the bill of exceptions it appears that
"The attorney for the United States stated that he claimed that
the fees received by said Hill in naturalization cases were those
specifically provided for by statute for like acts done by the
clerk in all cases; that he did not claim to recover for any sums
received for services and acts which any unofficial person might do
for the court, but for those sums received for acts done as clerk
of the district court, which make the history of the case on the
records of the court, and which cannot legally be performed by any
other than a clerk of a United States court, and which are done in
that capacity."
Read in the light of this disclaimer, the offer of proof was no
more than that "large sums" of the money which it was admitted Hill
had received in naturalization business were for fees specifically
fixed by statute, and therefore to be accounted for. Such being the
case, there is nothing inconsistent between the introductory
statement and the offer of proof. It is clear, therefore, that the
statement was intended to be, and is in fact a part of the record
to be considered by us. Being a part of the record, it shows that
the value of the matter in dispute does not exceed $5,000, because
in no event could there have been a recovery in the action of more
than $517.07, and possibly a small amount of interest.
The part of § 699 of the Revised Statutes which is relied
on as giving us jurisdiction notwithstanding the small amount
involved is the second subdivision, which provides for a writ of
error, without regard to the sum or value in dispute, upon "any
final judgment of a circuit court . . . in any civil action brought
by the United States for the enforcement of any revenue law
thereof." The original statute of which this is a reenactment was
passed May 31, 1844, c. 31, 5 Stat. 658, and is as follows:
"That final judgments of any circuit court of the United States
in any civil action brought by the United States for the
enforcement of the revenue laws of the United States or for the
collection of duties due or alleged to be due on merchandise
imported therein may be reexamined and reversed or affirmed in the
Supreme Court of the United States upon
Page 123 U. S. 685
writs of error as in other cases, without regard to the sum or
value in controversy in such action at the instance of either
party."
Section 823 of the Revised Statutes provides that "The following
and no other compensation shall be taxed and allowed to . . .
clerks of the circuit . . . courts." "The following" here referred
to is found in § 828, which prescribes the fees of a clerk.
Thus, far, the legislation has reference only to the compensation
to be paid a clerk for his services. But § 839 provides that
the clerk shall be allowed to retain of the fees and emoluments of
his office, for his personal compensation, a sum not exceeding
$3,500 a year. Section 833 makes it his duty to report semiannually
to the Attorney General all the fees and emoluments of his office
and all necessary expenditures, with vouchers for their payment.
Section 844 then requires him to pay into the Treasury any surplus
of such fees and emoluments which his return shows to exist over
and above the compensation and allowances authorized by law to be
retained by him.
The precise question for decision is whether this section, which
provides for the payment by the clerk into the Treasury of the
surplus moneys received by him as the fees and emoluments of his
office, is a "revenue law" within the meaning of that clause of
§ 699 which is relied on, and we have no hesitation in saying
that it is not. As the provision relates to the jurisdiction of
this Court for the review of the judgments of the circuit courts,
it is proper to refer to the statutes giving jurisdiction to those
courts to see if there is anything there to show what the term
"revenue law," as here used, means. Looking, then, to § 629 of
the Revised Statutes, we find that by the fourth subdivision, the
circuit courts have been granted original jurisdiction "of all
suits at law or in equity arising under any act providing for
revenue from imports or tonnage," and "of all causes arising under
any law providing internal revenue," and again, by the twelfth
subdivision,
"of all suits brought by any person to recover damages for any
injury to his person or property on account of any act done by him
under any law of the United States for the protection or
collection
Page 123 U. S. 686
of any of the revenues thereof."
This clearly implies that the term "revenue law," when used is
connection with the jurisdiction of the courts of the United
States, means a law imposing duties on imports or tonnage, or a law
providing in terms for revenue -- that is to say, a law which is
directly traceable to the power granted to Congress by Section 8,
Article I, of the Constitution, "to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts, and excises." This view is strengthened by the third
subdivision of § 699, which gives this Court jurisdiction,
without reference to the value in dispute, of
"any final judgment of a circuit court . . . in any civil action
against an officer of the revenue, for any act done by him in the
performance of his official duty."
Certainly it will not be claimed that the clerk of a district
court of the United States is an "officer of the revenue," but
there is nothing to indicate that the term "revenue" has any
different signification in this subdivision of the section from
that which it has in the other. The clerk of a court of the United
States collects his taxable "compensation" not as the revenue of
the United States, but as the fees and emoluments of his office,
with an obligation on his part to account to the United States for
all he gets over a certain sum which is fixed by law. This
obligation does not grow out of any "revenue law," properly so
called, but out of a statute governing an officer of a court of the
United States.
It follows that this is a case where our jurisdiction depends on
the value of the matter in dispute, and as that is not sufficient
in amount, that the motion to dismiss must be granted. It is
consequently so ordered.
Dismissed.