Apparently in consequence of these decisions, Congress, on March
3, 1839, passed an act, 5 Stat. 339, 349, c. 82, § 3, which,
as amended August 23, 1842, 5 Stat. 508, 510, c. 183, § 2,
provided
"That no officer in any branch of the public service, or any
other person whose salary, pay, or emoluments is or 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
whatsoever, unless the same shall be authorized by law, and the
appropriation therefor explicitly set forth that it is for such
additional pay, extra allowance, or compensation."
This provision was subsequently carried into the Revised
Statutes, § 1765. Of this statute it was said by this Court in
Hoyt v. United
States, 10 How. 109, 141:
"It cuts up by the roots these claims by public officers for
extra
Page 147 U. S. 680
compensation on the ground of extra services. There is no
discretion left in any officer or tribunal to make the allowance
unless it is authorized by some law of Congress. The prohibition is
general, and applies to all public officers or
quasi-public officers who have a fixed compensation."
This language was somewhat limited by Chief Justice Taney in
Converse v. United
States, 21 How. 463,
62 U. S. 471,
wherein he says of these provisions:
"They can by no fair interpretation be held to embrace an
employment which has no affinity or connection, either in its
character or by law or usage, with the line of his official duty
and where the service to be performed is of a different character
and for a different place and the amount of compensation regulated
by law."
An allowance was made by the court in this case (three of its
members dissenting) to a collector of customs as commission for the
purchase of supplies for the lighthouse service throughout the
United States, so far as such purchases were made for lighthouses
outside of his district and beyond the limits to which his duties
extended.
See also United States v. Brindle, 110 U.
S. 688.
Further construing this statute, it was held in
United
States v. Shoemaker, 7 Wall. 338, that a collector
of customs was not entitled to offset, in a suit against him by the
United States, compensation for disbursements made for building a
customhouse and marine hospital at the port where he was collector.
See also Hall v. United States, 91 U. S.
559, wherein items for setoff for extra services and
expenses were excluded, and
Badeau v. United States,
130 U. S. 439, in
which a retired army officer accepting pay under an appointment in
the consular service was held to be precluded from receiving salary
as an officer in the army.
In
United States v. Saunders, 120 U.
S. 126, it was held that this act had no application to
two distinct places, offices, or employments, each with its own
duties and compensation but both held by one person at the same
time. In delivering the opinion of the Court in this case, Mr.
Justice Miller observed that
"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 of otherwise, which
Page 147 U. S. 681
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."
We think that the construction given to this section in these
cases is conclusive against the claim of the clerk for
per
diem services in the drawing of juries, or for such services
as are not taxable, as orders, certificates, or the like, under
sec. 828, fixing the compensation of clerks. These services are not
rendered in a distinct capacity as jury commissioner, but are
incidental and germane to his regular duties as clerk.
2. An item for attendance on the circuit court at Macon by
deputy for several days was disallowed by the Comptroller upon the
ground that the clerk had been allowed a
per diem for his
personal attendance upon the court at Savannah upon the same day,
the Comptroller holding that the clerk was entitled to but one
per diem for anyone day, although the court might be in
session at two or more places, and the clerk be represented at one
of those places by a deputy. By Revised Statutes § 624, the
circuit court is authorized to appoint deputies of the clerk upon
his application, and provision is made by sections 626 and 839 for
compensation to such deputies to be paid by the clerk, and allowed
in the same manner as other expenses of his office are paid and
allowed. By section 796, the legal responsibility of the clerk for
the acts of his deputy is recognized. Under such circumstances,
when the law provides expressly for the appointment of a deputy,
and authorizes the clerk to pay his compensation as a part of his
office expenses, there can be no question that his acts as such
deputy should be recognized as the acts of the clerk himself, and
that the clerk is entitled to like fees for the performance of such
acts. It would not be claimed that the clerk would not be entitled
to his fee for clerical services in entering orders, etc.,
performed by his deputy. No valid distinction can be made in this
particular between such charges and the ordinary
per diem
charges for attendance.
Page 147 U. S. 682
Among the fees provided for the clerk by section 828 are five
dollars a day for his attendance upon the court "while actually in
session," with a qualification contained in section 831 that
"when the circuit and district courts sit at the same time, no
greater
per diem or other allowance shall be made to any
such officer than for an attendance on one court."
As the circuit and district courts are ordinarily held together
at the same time and place by the district judge, sitting both as
judge of the district and of the circuit court, and cases in both
courts are disposed of indifferently, and without reference to the
court in which they are pending, the obvious purpose of this
proviso was to limit the officials to a single
per diem
for attendance upon both courts. Where, however, the two courts are
held in different places, or, as in this case, in different
divisions of the same judicial district, upon the same day or where
a court is held by the regular district judge at one place and a
different branch or division of the same court is held at another
place by the circuit judge or a district judge designated under the
statute for that purpose, the reason of the rule does not apply. In
such a case, a separate staff of officers is necessary for each
place, and equitably each is entitled to fees for attendance. We
think the last clause of section 831 should be limited to cases
where the court sits not only at the same time, but at the same
place. It is unnecessary to decide whether, when the district
consists of two divisions and courts are held in both divisions by
the same judge and officers, they are one court or two. It is
sufficient for the purpose of this case to hold that the sessions
are separate, and that the clerk is entitled to charge for his own
attendance at one place and for that of his deputy at another.
3. The eighth item relates to the case of one Clayton, who was
removed under Revised Statutes sec. 1014, by order of the judge to
the Northern District of Georgia for trial. No objection is made to
the particulars of this item except to the charge for docketing and
indexing, which cannot be allowed, as the proceeding is not a
"cause," within the meaning of section 828, providing for docket
fees. The application to the judge is a summary one, and
accompanied by a copy of the
Page 147 U. S. 683
indictment, information, or commitment of the commissioner
before whom he has been examined, and ordinary no evidence is
required except as to the identity of the accused when the judge
issues a warrant for his removal, and no papers are required to be
filed with the clerk.
4. Items 10 and 11, for entering orders approving the accounts
of marshals and other officers, are allowed upon the authority of
United States v. Jones, ante, 147 U. S. 672,
just decided.
5. Item 13 is for making reports of the amount of fees due by
the United States to jurors and witnesses for traveling and
attendance, and for filing orders of the court to pay the same. The
practice in the Southern District of Georgia with regard to the
payment of fees due by the United States to witnesses and jurors is
stated by the court below to be as follows, (
Erwin v. United
States, 37 F. 470, 483):
"When a case has been disposed of and the witnesses are
discharged by the district attorney from further attendance, they
report to the clerk's office. The clerk then ascertains the exact
amount due them for attendance and mileage by examination of their
subpoenas, questioning them as to the place from which they have
traveled, and comparing their statements with a table of distances
kept in his office for that purpose, and the witness is sworn on a
jurat drawn on his subpoena ticket to the correctness of his claim.
If any doubtful question arises, it is referred to the presiding
judge for his decision. The days attended, mileage, and amounts due
the respective witnesses are then entered on a report, which is
signed by the clerk, and submitted to the court for its
approval."
If the court adjudge the report correct, he endorses upon it an
order for the payment of the witnesses and jurors. The only
criticism to be made upon this practice is in requiring separate
orders to be made in each case.
The practice in most districts allows the witness or juror to
appear before the clerk, make oath to his mileage and attendance,
and receive a ticket or memorandum of the amount due him, which he
presents to the marshal, who takes his receipt upon a large roll
opened for the signature of all such jurors and witnesses as are
paid off during the term. One order is
Page 147 U. S. 684
then made to pay all persons whose names are on the roll, and
the expense of a separate order in each case is thereby avoided. In
the Southern District of Georgia, the practice seems to have been
for each witness or juror, as he was discharged, to appear
separately or in small numbers before the clerk, who administered
the oath, for which he charged 10 cents; drew a report, for which
he charged 30 cents; entered an order on the minutes, 30 cents;
filed copy of the same, 10 cents; made a copy of the same to
accompany the marshal's accounts, 20 cents, and annexed his
certificate thereto, 15 cents. The clerk's charges thus aggregated
$1.15 for the payment of a witness, whose fees may not have
exceeded $1.50, or of a single juror, whose fees may not have
exceeded $2. Any practice which puts the government to such an
expense is burdensome, vexations, and oppressive. In the present
case, a separate report seems to have been made, and a separate
order issued, whenever a juror or witness was discharged or a small
number were discharged together, and the item contains charges for
drawing 332 reports at 30 cents each, and filing 358 orders at 10
cents each; the Comptroller allowing the items for entering the
orders, and making copies of the same for the marshal. In view of
the petty character of these claims, if the clerk be competent, it
would seem that the practice usually pursued would sufficiently
protect the government, and would render unnecessary a scheme which
seems to have been skillfully devised for the multiplication of
fees. This charge must be disallowed.
6. Item 18 is for drawing three recognizances in a single
criminal case, and was disallowed by the Comptroller upon the
ground that one recognizance for all the witnesses would have been
sufficient. We agree with this conclusion, and the item will
therefore be disallowed unless it be made to appear that the
witnesses could not conveniently have recognized together.
7. Item 17 is for entering upon the final record the proceedings
before the committing magistrate, namely, affidavit; warrant of
arrest; marshal's return, and finding of the commissioner of
probable cause of defendant's guilt, upon which the information is
founded; commitment to jail in default of
Page 147 U. S. 685
bond; recognizance, where given, and justification of surety,
and waiver of homestead exemption, where it is waived; petition and
order for subpoenas on part of defendant at the expense of the
government; commitment under sentence, and marshal's return,
$60.75.
While we held in the case of
United States v. Van
Duzee, 140 U. S. 169,
140 U. S. 170,
� 1, that the clerk was entitled to a fee for filing papers
sent up by the commissioner, they evidently form no part of the
record in the circuit court, and the clerk is not entitled to a fee
for entering them. The record proper begins with the indictment or
information, and ends with the sentence and commitment. The
proceedings before a commissioner are principally for the
information of the district attorney. In
United States v. Van
Duzee, 140 U. S. 169,
140 U. S. 176,
� 9, the clerk was allowed to recover for so much of the
record as included the order of the commissioner binding the party
to appear before the grand jury, on account of a rule of the court
in that case requiring this order to appear in the final
record.
This disposes of all the questions raised in the brief of the
Attorney General, and the judgment of the court below will
therefore be
Reversed, and the case remanded with directions to reduce
the judgment in conformity with this opinion.