G. was a shipping commissioner at Mobile from June, 1889, to
February, 1890. In November, 1889, the Secretary of the Treasury
notified him that his compensation would thereafter be at a sum not
exceeding $100 in any one month, and that no pay additional to that
compensation would be allowed him for his services. In December,
1889, January, 1890, and February, 1890, each, he rendered an
account claiming $25 in each month for salary of a clerk, payment
of which being refused, he brought this action.
Held that
he was not entitled to recover.
The appellee sued in the court below to recover certain fees and
clerk hire which he claimed to be due for services rendered as
shipping commissioner at the port of Mobile from June 18, 1889, to
February, 1890. The claim was for $1,607 and costs. There was
judgment below in his favor for $75, being $25 a month for clerk
hire during the months of December, 1889, and January and February,
1890. From this judgment the United States appealed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The findings of fact in the court below were as follows:
"I. The claimant was a shipping commissioner at the port of
Mobile, Ala."
"During the term of his service, he made a detailed report
monthly to the Secretary of the Treasury of his services and the
fees provided by law, with a full, exact, and itemized account of
receipts and expenditures."
"For the months of December, 1889, and January and February,
1890, his returns were as follows: "
Page 155 U. S. 390
December, 1889, paid salary of clerk, $25 . . . . . $262.75
January, 1890, paid salary of clerk, $25. . . . . . 311.75
February, 1890, paid salary of clerk, $25 . . . . . 284.50
"On each of said accounts, the Secretary made and signed the
following endorsement:"
" Approved in the sum of one hundred dollars ($100), and
respectfully referred to the first auditor, who will please state
an account in favor of the U.S. shipping commissioner for the
amount found due, payable from the appropriation for 'Salaries,
shipping service.'"
" The services enumerated within appear to have been necessarily
rendered."
"The account was stated by the auditor, admitted and certified
by the Comptroller, and paid to claimant in accordance therewith,
except that the services of the clerk were wholly omitted from the
account."
"II. Previously to that time the Secretary of the Treasury had
fixed the compensation of said claimant not to exceed the sum of
$100 a month, by a letter addressed to him, as follows:"
"Washington, D.C. November 23, 1889"
"U.S. Shipping Commissioner, Mobile, Ala."
" Sir: From and after the 1st proximo, the compensation allowed
you under section 1 of the Act of June 19, 1886, will not exceed
the sum of one hundred dollars ($100) in anyone month. If the
services performed by you in any month do not warrant the payment
of one hundred dollars under the existing regulations, your
compensation for that month will remain as heretofore fixed. No pay
additional to the monthly compensation herein mentioned will be
allowed for your services as shipping commissioner."
" Respectfully yours,"
"C. S. Fairchild,
Secretary"
The law governing the compensation of shipping commissioners is
found in the Acts of June 26, 1884, c. 121, § 27, 23 Stat. 53,
59, and of June 19, 1886, c. 421, § 1, 24 Stat. 79. By
Page 155 U. S. 391
the first of these statutes (that of June, 1884) it is provided
that:
"Shipping commissioners shall monthly render a full, exact, and
itemized account of their receipts and expenditures to the
Secretary of the Treasury, who shall determine their compensation,
and shall from time to time determine the number and compensation
of the clerks appointed by such commissioner, with the approval of
the Secretary of the Treasury, subject to the limitations now fixed
by law."
And also that:
"All fees of shipping commissioners shall be paid into the
Treasury of the United States, and shall constitute a fund which
shall be used under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury
to pay the compensation of said commissioners and their clerks, and
such other expenses as he may find necessary to insure the proper
administration of their duties."
By the second statute (June 19, 1886) it is provided that:
"Shipping commissioners who are paid wholly or partly by fees
shall make a detailed report of such services and the fees provided
by law to the Secretary of the Treasury, under such regulations as
that officer may prescribe, and the Secretary of the Treasury shall
allow and pay from any money in the Treasury, not otherwise
appropriated, said officers such compensation for said services as
each would have received prior to the passage of this act; also
such compensation to clerks of shipping commissioners as would have
been paid them had this act not passed:
provided that such
services have, in the opinion of the Secretary of the Treasury,
been necessarily rendered."
We think it clear that the right of a shipping commissioner to
employ clerks under these provisions depends on the sanction of the
Secretary of the Treasury. Indeed, the act of 1884 expressly so
says. The act of 1886, while making some changes as to the method
of compensating the commissioners, specifically provides that the
clerks of such commissioners shall receive such compensation as
would have been paid to them if that act had not passed. If the
last act did not repeal the act of 1884, the plaintiff could not
recover without
Page 155 U. S. 392
the endorsement of the Secretary of the Treasury, since that act
gives him the right to determine the number and the compensation of
clerks to be appointed by the commissioner. If the act of 1884 was
repealed by the act of 1886, the plaintiff was equally without the
right to recover clerk hire, because under the act of 1886, the
amount of compensation to be paid to the commissioner or his clerk
depends altogether on the judgment of the Secretary of the
Treasury, who is required by that act to certify that such services
appeared to have been necessarily rendered.
The Secretary formally notified the shipping commissioner in
November, 1889, previous to the month for which clerk hire was
claimed, that his compensation would be limited to $100 per month,
and that no additional compensation would be allowed. When the
vouchers were presented, including the items of clerk hire, the
Secretary approved them only for $100 per month. This allowance
necessarily excluded the clerk hire.
The court below based its ruling upon the fact that in approving
the vouchers up to the amount of $100, the Secretary made the
statement that "the services enumerated appear to have been
necessarily rendered." But this language of the Secretary was that
which the statute required him to use in affixing his approval. As
he only approved up to $100, which excluded the clerk's pay, the
language must necessarily be applied only to the services which he
approved, and not to those which he disapproved. To hold otherwise
would be to say that although the Secretary rejected the items for
clerk hire, he yet approved them. The error below results from
considering the Secretary's certificate as referring to other
services than those which he approved.
Judgment reversed, and case remanded with directions to
render judgment for the United States.