Ordinarily a court has no power to grant a new trial at a term
subsequent to that at which the original judgment was rendered.
The Court of Claims, however, under Rev.Stat. § 1088, has
power to grant a new trial in such case on a motion on behalf of
the United States, and a mandate from this Court does not affect
that power.
When such a motion is made on behalf of the government on the
ground that its officers understood that there was an agreement
that a case which had been appealed to this Court by the United
States, and had been remanded to that court by this Court on the
ground that the appellants had not entered it here, was to abide
the result in another case appealed from the Court of Claims by the
United States and decided here in their favor, the granting of the
motion by the Court of Claims mast be taken by this Court as
conclusive on the question whether the evidence warranted the
action of that court, as that evidence is not preserved.
The payment to an Indian agent of the amount appropriated by
Congress for the payment of his salary being less than the amount
fixed by general law as the salary of the office, and his receipt
of the sum paid "in full of my pay for services for the period
herein expressed," is a full satisfaction of the claim.
United States v. Langston, 118 U.
S. 389, explained and limited.
Page 150 U. S. 589
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The history of this case is as follows: in 1882, the appellant
filed his petition in the Court of Claims alleging that as a duly
appointed and commissioned United States Indian agent, for a series
of years, he was entitled to a salary of $1,800 per annum; that he
had only received a certain portion of that amount, and praying
judgment for the balance. A trial was had before the court, which,
on March 19, 1883, filed its findings of fact, and rendered
judgment in his favor for the sum of $3,400. At the same time was
tried the case of
Charles Mitchell v. United States, and
they were both argued as presenting the same question of law --
to-wit, whether a public officer could
"recover the difference between the salary established by law
for the office which he held and the amount paid to him in
accordance with the appropriations made by Congress."
An appeal was taken in each case by the United States. That in
the
Mitchell case was duly entered in this Court, and was
submitted on briefs on March 30, 1883. On November 5 of that year,
this Court rendered its decision in favor of the United States,
reversing the judgment of the court below.
109 U. S. 109 U.S.
146.
The appeal in the present case was taken on June 14, 1883, but
was not entered by the appellant at the October term following, as
required by the rules of this Court. Thereupon the appellee caused
the appeal to be docketed and dismissed, and on May 12, 1884, filed
with the Court of Claims the mandate, in which the following orders
were set out:
"And whereas, in the present term of October, in the year of our
Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-three, the said cause
came on to be heard before the Supreme Court, and it appearing that
the appellant has failed to have its appeal filed and docketed in
conformity with the rules of this Court, it is now here ordered and
adjudged by this Court that his appeal from the Court of Claims be,
and the same is hereby, docketed and dismissed."
"And it is further ordered that this cause be, and the same is
hereby, remanded to the said Court of Claims. (May 5, 1884.)"
"You therefore are hereby commanded that such proceedings
Page 150 U. S. 590
be had in said cause as, according to right and justice and the
laws of the United States, ought to be had, the said appeal
notwithstanding."
On the 13th of May, the United States, by the Attorney General,
filed a motion in the Court of Claims for a new trial on the ground
that wrong and injustice in the premises had been done to the
United States. The reasons therefor, as stated, were that the two
cases were heard together; that in both the judgment was for the
plaintiff, and both cases were appealed to the Supreme Court; that
the same questions of law were involved in each case, and that the
defendants understood that the appeal in this case was to abide the
decision in the case of
Mitchell; that, relying upon this
understanding, they took no further action in this case, and it was
only in consequence of such reliance that the transcript was not
filed by them in the District Court, and the opportunity thus given
to the appellant to have the case docketed and dismissed; that by
the
Mitchell case the law has been decided adversely to
the claim of petitioner, and therefore that wrong and injustice
would under the circumstances be done by permitting the judgment to
stand.
On the second of June, 1884, the Court of Claims sustained the
motion, and granted a new trial. Of this appellant complains. As
the new trial was granted at a term subsequent to that at which the
original judgment was rendered (the terms of the Court of Claims
beginning on the first Monday in December in each year, Rev.Stat.
§ 1052), there would ordinarily be no power in the court to
grant such new trial,
Coughlin v. District of Columbia,
106 U. S. 7;
Brooks v. Railroad Company, 102 U.
S. 107. But there is a peculiar provision applicable
only to the Court of Claims, which is as follows:
"SEC 1088. The Court of Claims at any time while any claim it
pending before it or on appeal from it or within two years next
after the final disposition of such claim, may, on motion on behalf
of the United States, grant a new trial and stay the payment of any
judgment therein upon such evidence, cumulative or otherwise, as
shall satisfy the court
Page 150 U. S. 591
that any fraud, wrong, or injustice in the premises has been
done to the United States; but until an order is made staying the
payment of a judgment, the same shall be payable and paid as now
provided by law."
In order to give full effect to this statute, the Court of
Claims must have power to grant a new trial at a term subsequent to
that at which the judgment was rendered, for it explicitly provides
that it may be exercised at any time within two years. This section
has been before this Court in several cases, and in them its scope
and effect considered and determined.
United
States v. Ayres, 9 Wall. 608;
United
States v. Crusell, 12 Wall. 175;
Ex Parte
Russell, 13 Wall. 664;
Ex Parte
United States, 16 Wall. 699;
United States v.
Young, 94 U. S. 258;
Young v. United States, 95 U. S. 642,
95 U. S. 643.
That a mandate from this Court does not prevent the operation of
this statute or take away the power or interfere with the
discretion of the Court of Claims to grant a new trial was settled
in
Ex Parte Russell, supra.
The testimony presented to the court in support of this motion
is not preserved. We must, therefore, assume it to have been
sufficient to establish the facts stated in the motion, and the
only question for us to consider is as to the power of the court,
upon those facts, to order a new trial. Counsel for appellant
contend that they disclose nothing but a mere mistake of law, or
ignorance of the rules and practice of this Court, on the part of
the officers of the government, and that under
Green v.
Elbert, 137 U. S. 615,
such matters are insufficient. But we do not so understand the
record. No case abides the decision of another case except by
agreement of the parties, and so, when it is stated that the
defendants understood that the appeal in this was to abide the
decision in the
Mitchell case, what is meant is that they
understood that an agreement to that effect had been made. If such
an agreement had actually been made by the parties, and then, in
willful disregard thereof, one party had taken the steps disclosed
here of docketing and dismissing the appeal, a court would properly
interfere to prevent the successful consummation of such attempted
wrong. Instead of charging
Page 150 U. S. 592
such an agreement, and a deliberate breach thereof by the
appellant, all that is claimed by the United States is that there
was on their part an understanding that there was such an
agreement, and that they acted in reliance upon such an
understanding. We are to assume that the testimony showed that
there were reasonable grounds for believing in the existence of
such an agreement and for acting in reliance thereupon. The
defendants were guilty of no laches or omissions, and the effect
upon them is the same as if there had been in fact an agreement and
a willful breach. That being so, it would evidently be a wrong, an
injustice to the government, not to relieve it from the
consequences of such a mistake of fact and to continue in force a
judgment which ought not to have been rendered. We think that the
Court of Claims was authorized, upon the facts stated in this
motion, to grant a new trial.
It becomes, therefore, necessary to consider the facts as
disclosed by the findings made upon the second trial and in
connection with the various provisions of the statutes. Section
2052 of the Revised Statutes contains this provision:
"The President is authorized to appoint from time to time, by
and with the advice and consent of the Senate, the following Indian
agents: . . . Four for the tribes in California at an annual salary
of eighteen hundred dollars, each."
On February 4, 1876, appellant was commissioned by the President
as agent for the Indians of the Tule River agency in California. On
filing his bond, he received a letter enclosing his commission in
which it was stated that his "compensation remains at $1,500 per
annum." On the 5th of March, 1880, he was reappointed, with a
commission in like form. Notice of this appointment was sent to him
on the 15th of March by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and in
the letter was this statement: "The salary of the office is $1,000
per annum." The appellant discharged the duties of the office from
the time of his appointment continuously until September 30, 1882,
and received the salary appropriated by Congress therefor, by the
several appropriation acts during that time, and his receipts for
such compensation contain this
Page 150 U. S. 593
recital: "Being in full or our (my) pay for services for the
period herein expressed." Neither the appropriation law in force
when the Revised Statutes took effect nor any of those of the nine
succeeding years appropriated a salary of $1,800 for the Tule River
agency. Such appropriations were as follows:
1873-74, Act Feb. 14, 1873, (17 Stat. 437) . . . $1,500
1874-75, Act June 22, 1874, (18 Stat. 146) . . . 1,500
1875-76, Act March 3, 1875, (18 Stat. 421) . . . 1,500
1876-77, Act Aug. 15, 1876, (19 Stat. 176) . . . 1,500
1877-78, Act March 3, 1877, (19 Stat. 271) . . . 1,500
1878-79, Act May 27, 1878, (20 Stat. 63) . . . 1,000
1879-80, Act Feb. 17, 1879, (20 Stat. 295) . . . 1,000
1880-81, Act May 11, 1880, (21 Stat. 114) . . . 1,000
1881-82, Act March 3, 1881, (21 Stat. 425) . . . 1,000
1882-83, Act May 17, 1882, (22 Stat. 68) . . . 1,000
Of these ten appropriation acts, the first four made
appropriations for only three agencies in California (Hoopa Valley,
Round Valley, and Tule River), the fifth made an appropriation for
only two of these agencies, (Round Valley and Tule River), while
the last five made appropriations for four agencies, that of Hoopa
Valley being restored and the Mission agency being added, but the
salary of the agent at this last point was at first fixed at
$3,000, and by the Act of June 14, 1878, 20 Stat. 115, 119, c. 191,
reduced to $1,300 at which figure it remained under the other
acts.
In all these ten acts, the appropriations for the pay of the
other California agents, as well as the one at Tule River, differ
from the figure named in section 2052; in the first five acts, the
other appropriations being at the same rate as that allowed for
Tule River, while in the last five, the Round Valley agent is paid
$1,500, the Mission agent $1,300, and the other two $1,000.
Since this case was commenced, we have had before us the
following cases in which a claim was made on behalf of an officer
of the United States of a right to recover more than
Page 150 U. S. 594
the amount appropriated by Congress for his compensation by
reason of the existence of a statute prescribing a salary.
United States v. Fisher, 109 U. S. 143;
United States v. Mitchell, 109 U.
S. 146;
United States v. Langston, 118 U.
S. 389;
Wallace v. United States, 133 U.
S. 180, and
Dunwoody v. United States,
143 U. S. 578. In
one of these cases,
United States v. Langston, we held
that the act prescribing the salary controlled; in the others, that
the appropriation acts were conclusive as to the amount the officer
was entitled to receive. The difference in result does not,
however, show a variation in ruling. On the contrary, all the cases
have been decided in accordance with the general rule laid down in
United States v. Mitchell, supra: "The whole question
depends on the intention of Congress as expressed in the
statutes."
In the
Langston case, it appeared that the salary of
the minister to Hayti was fixed by the Revised Statutes at $7,500,
and that that sum was annually appropriated until the year 1883. In
the statutes of two of those years, to-wit, 1879 and 1880, it was
expressly provided that the appropriation should be in full for the
annual salary, and that all laws and parts of laws in conflict with
the provisions of the act should be repealed. In the years 1883,
1884, and 1885, there was simply an appropriation of $5,000 for the
minister to Hayti. The plaintiff held the office from September 28,
1877, until July 24, 1885. Until 1883, he was paid at the rate of
$7,500 per annum, but for the remaining years he received only the
amount of the appropriation, to-wit, $5,000 per annum. And this
Court held that there was nothing in the language of these last
appropriation acts which could be satisfactorily construed as
repealing the express language of the section fixing the salary at
$7,500 per annum -- a salary which had been recognized by Congress
for ten years in its appropriations, and by language in some of the
acts clearly declaring that to be the salary attached to that
office. Repeals by implication are not favored, and it was held
that the mere failure to appropriate the full salary was not, in
and of itself alone, sufficient to repeal the prior act, and yet
the Court conceded
Page 150 U. S. 595
at the close of the opinion that "the case is not free from
difficulty.�
While not questioning at all the
Langston case, we
think that it expresses the limit in that direction.
In this case, there are several considerations which tend to
show that appellant's right to compensation was not fixed by §
2052, Revised Statutes. In the first place, the agency at Tule
River is not specifically named in the section, though doubtless it
would come within its description. It had been an agency existing
before the Revised Statutes, and never had there been for it any
appropriation over $1,500. Congress, in the ten appropriation acts
passed after the Revised Statutes, and before the close of
appellant's term of service, did not recognize the salary of $1,800
in respect to any one of the agencies in California. It
discriminated between them, giving different salaries to different
agencies, some of these being in excess of any prescribed by §
2052. The fact of discrimination, and the constant disregard of
§ 2052 in respect to all agencies, indicates that the matter
was present to the consideration of Congress, and that, in naming
the various amounts during these several years, it was fixing the
entire compensation which it intended should be given. It was a
legislative readjustment of salaries, for it is not to be believed
that Congress, during all these years, was simply appropriating a
part of that which it knew was due to its officers. A significant
fact is, too, that when it first appropriated for the Mission
agency on May 27, 1878, it appropriated $3,000, but on June 14,
1878, within less than three weeks, it passed an act reducing the
salary to $1,300. Still more significant is the fact that up to
1878, the appropriation for Indian agents was without
individualizing the amounts for the separate agencies. Thus, in the
Act of August 15, 1876, 19 Stat. 176 (and the other statutes were
similar), we find the appropriation in these words: "For pay of
sixty-eight agents of Indian affairs at one thousand five hundred
dollars each, except the one at Iowa at five hundred dollars,
namely, . . . " while from 1878 onward, each agency was named, and
the pay attached to that agency separately designated. Thus, in the
Act of May 27, 1878, 20
Page 150 U. S. 596
Stat. 64, c. 142, the appropriation commences in this way:
"For pay of seventy-four agents of Indian affairs at the
following named agencies at the rates respectively indicated,
namely: at the Warm Springs agency at one thousand dollars; at the
Klamath agency at one thousand one hundred dollars."
And then follow, in like manner, the name of each agency, and
the salary attached thereto, several of the salaries being in
excess of those given by said section 2052. Evidently this change
grew out of section 4 of the Appropriation Act of 1876, 19 Stat.
200:
"That hereafter the estimates for appropriations for the Indian
service shall be presented in such form as to show the amounts
required for each of the agencies in the several states or
territories, and for said states and territories,
respectively."
This act was passed August 15, 1876, and apparently there was
not sufficient time before the passage of the Appropriation Act of
1877, March 3, 1877, to satisfactorily prepare the estimates, and
so the form of the legislation of Congress was not changed until
1878. But, when changed, it was a change indicating that each
particular agency was called to the attention of Congress, and the
amount which should be paid to the agent at that agency
specifically determined. In this connection, it is well to note the
language used in the appropriation acts to denote the purpose of
the appropriation. Thus, in the act of 1878 -- and subsequent
statutes are similar -- it is that the "following sums be, and they
are hereby, appropriated . . . for the purpose of paying the
current and contingent expenses of the Indian department," and
immediately thereafter follows the language which we have
heretofore quoted, "for pay of seventy-four agents . . . at the
rates respectively indicated, namely. . . ." This language carries
a strong implication that Congress was intending to pay the current
expenses in full, and intended that the sums named for these Indian
agents should be the total amount they should be entitled to
receive. When to these facts is added that the plaintiff with his
first commission received notice that the salary was to be $1,500,
as had been for years theretofore appropriated by Congress, and on
reappointment that it was
Page 150 U. S. 597
$1,000, and that during the years of his service, he received
the appropriations and receipted for them as in full payment for
his services, we think it must be adjudged that he has received all
that of right and by law he is entitled to receive, and that the
judgment of the Court of Claims should therefore be
Affirmed.