The Act of March 3, 1883, c. 97, 22 Stat. 473, relating to
longevity pay, deals with credit for length of service and the
additional pay which arises therefrom, and not with the matter of
regular salary, and it has no reference to benefits derived from
promotions to different grades, but is confined to the lowest grade
having graduated pay.
The Court of Claims dismissed the claimant's petition, whereupon
he took this appeal. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims finding
in favor of the United States, and dismissing the petition of the
claimant, Barton. The findings of fact and conclusion of law were
as follows:
"I. The claimant was appointed acting assistant paymaster in the
volunteer navy of the United States, January 30, 1864; assistant
paymaster, March 2, 1867; passed assistant paymaster, February 10,
1870, and paymaster in the regular navy, May 29, 1882. He has been
continuously in the navy from his first appointment to the present
time."
"II. He has received the salary and graduated or longevity pay
allowed by the Act of July 17, 1861, 12 Stat. 258, and the Act of
March 2, 1867, c.197, § 3, 14 Stat. 516, now Rev.Stat. §
1412, and the benefit of all laws in force during the time he has
held the offices mentioned in the preceding finding, except that he
has received no additional benefits under the
Page 129 U. S. 250
Acts of August 5, 1882, c. 391, 22 Stat. 287, and March 3, 1883,
c. 97, 22 Stat. 473."
"III. If he be entitled under said last-mentioned acts of 1882
and 1883 to allowance for the sums which he would have received had
he entered the regular navy when he entered the volunteer navy, and
had he been promoted from time to time, under the rule of promotion
provided by the Revised Statutes, §§ 1380, 1458, 1496,
and the previous statutes embodied therein, the defendant would be
indebted to him to an amount which, for reasons which appear in the
opinion, we do not compute."
"
Conclusion of Law"
"Upon the foregoing findings of fact, the court decides as a
conclusion of law that the claimant is not entitled to recover, and
his petition must be dismissed."
The acts of Congress of 1882 and 1883 read thus:
"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,
provided that nothing in this clause shall
be so construed as to authorize any change in the dates of
commission or in the relative rank of such officers."
August 5, 1882, c. 391, 22 Stat. 287.
"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, provided that
nothing in this clause shall be so construed as to authorize any
change in the dates of commission or in the relative rank of such
officers;
provided further that nothing herein contained shall
be so construed as to give any additional pay to any such officer
during the time of his service in the volunteer army or
navy."
Act of March 3, 1883, c. 97, 22 Stat. 473.
Page 129 U. S. 251
Under the provisions of the Act of July 17, 1861, entitled "An
act to provide for the appointment of assistant paymasters in the
navy," 12 Stat. 258, assistant paymasters were entitled to receive
graduated pay, and under the provisions of § 3 of the Act of
March 2, 1867, 14 Stat. 516; Rev.Stat. § 1412, Barton received
a credit as assistant paymaster for three years and thirty-one
days' service in the volunteer navy as acting assistant paymaster,
and his second five years' service in the regular navy commenced
after the expiration of the five years preceding, including therein
the volunteer service, and he has consequently received all the
benefits, under the longevity pay acts of his whole service "as if
all such service had been continuous and in the regular navy."
But he contends that if he had been appointed in the regular
navy January 30, 1864, he would have been promoted from time to
time earlier than he was, and that he is entitled to pay in the
several grades of service as if he had received such earlier
promotion, and by his petition he claims that the difference
between what he has received and what he would have received if he
had been commissioned as assistant paymaster January 30, 1864, when
he entered the volunteer navy, amounts to $7,672.40, made up of the
differences of pay in the several grades if he had attained them as
early as he believes he would if his service had commenced in the
regular navy.
The argument is that under the act of 1883, which amended and
superseded that of 1882, officers so situated as Barton, while
denied rank and commissions under the statute, have the right to
the pay of the several grades they might have reached if their
appointments in the regular navy are treated as having been made at
the date of their entry into the volunteer service.
We cannot concur in this interpretation of the act, which, in
our opinion, deals with credit for length of service, and the
additional pay which arises therefrom, and not with the matter of
regular salary, and has no reference to benefits derived from
promotion to different grades, but is confined to the lowest grade
having graduated pay.
It was upon this view that it was held in
United
States v.
Page 129 U. S. 252
Rockwell, 120 U. S. 60, that
the effect of the act was to lengthen the time of service in the
lowest grade having graduated pay by crediting, all previous
services for the purpose only of increasing longevity pay in that
grade. It follows that the Court of Claims was right in its
conclusion in the premises, and we need not enter upon the
consideration of what the learned Chief Justice of that court
correctly terms
"the complicated problem of promotion which he [Barton] might
have had, involving, as it does, the promotion of many other
officers above and below him in rank, who would in like manner be
affected by the provisions of the statute and whose promotion,
dependent upon previous service not found in this case, would
materially affect his own."
The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.