The clerk of a district court of a territory is bound to account
to the United States for fees received by him from private parties
in civil actions and from the territory on account of territorial
business.
The clerk of a district court of a territory is not bound to
account to the United States for sums received for his services in
naturalization proceedings.
This was an action brought December 31, 1892, in the Third
Judicial District Court of the Territory of Utah by the United
States against Henry G. McMillan, clerk of that court, and the
sureties on his official bond to recover the amount of certain fees
received by him and not accounted for.
The complaint contained two counts, the first of which alleged
that
"between January 8 and December 31, 1889, inclusive, the said
Henry G. McMillan, while clerk as aforesaid, and as such, earned,
collected, and received from different sources, as the fees and
emoluments of his said office, $7,458.70, of which sum $988.90 was
earned and received in United States business, $3,776 for
declarations of intention and naturalizations, and $2,693.80 from
private persons in civil litigation, and from the Territory of Utah
on account of territorial business;"
that he was entitled to retain, of the moneys aforesaid, the sum
of $1,984.93 as his personal compensation, and the further sum of
$1,744.05 as the reasonable and necessary expenses of his office,
as allowed by the Attorney
Page 165 U. S. 505
General of the United States; that it was his duty, as clerk
aforesaid, on January 31, 1890, to account for and to pay over to
the United States all moneys so earned and received by him as
aforesaid in excess of these two sums, and that he neglected and
failed so to do.
The second count was precisely like the first except that it
related to fees received between January 1 and December 31, 1890,
inclusive, and specified different sums.
The defendants demurred to the complaint as not stating facts
sufficient constitute a cause of action. The court sustained the
demurrer, and, the attorney for the United States saying that he
could not amend the complaint, judgment was rendered for the
defendants. The United States appealed to the supreme court of the
territory, which affirmed the judgment. 10 Utah 184. The United
States sued out this writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
The questions presented by the case are whether "the fees and
emoluments of his office," for which it is the duty of the clerk of
a district court of the Territory of Utah to account to the United
States, include: (1) fees received by him from private parties in
civil actions, and from the territory on account of territorial
business, (2) sums received by him for declarations of intention,
and for naturalizations, of aliens.
The true answer to each of these questions appears to us, if not
to be found in at least to be necessarily inferred from, one of two
judgments of this Court, both delivered by Mr. Justice Blatchford,
who, from his long experience in the
Page 165 U. S. 506
district and circuit courts, was peculiarly familiar with
questions of this kind.
United States v. Averill,
130 U. S. 335;
United States v. Hill, 120 U. S. 169. The
weight of those decisions, as applied to the case at bar, may be
the better appreciated by recapitulating the legislation supposed
to affect the case.
The Congress of the United States, by the Act of February 26,
1853, c. 80, entitled "An act to regulate the fees and costs to be
allowed to clerks, marshals and attorneys of the circuit and
district courts of the United States, and for other purposes,"
enacted, in section 1, that in lieu of the compensation then
allowed by law, the fees and costs therein specified, and no other
compensation, should be taxed and allowed to
"attorneys, solicitors and proctors in the United States courts,
to United States district attorneys, clerks of the district and
circuit courts, marshals, witnesses, jurors, commissioners and
printers, in the several states,"
and, in section 3, that such district attorneys, clerks, and
marshals should make half-yearly returns in writing to the
Secretary of the Interior, "embracing all the fees and emoluments
of their respective offices, of every name and character;" that
"no clerk of a district court, or clerk of a circuit court,
shall be allowed by the said secretary to retain, of the fees and
emoluments of his said office, or, in case both of said clerkships
shall be held by the same person, of the said offices, for his own
personal compensation, over and above the necessary expenses of his
office, and necessary clerk hire included, also to be audited and
allowed by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury, a sum
exceeding three thousand five hundred dollars per year for any such
district clerk or circuit clerk, or at and after that rate for such
time as he shall hold the office,"
and that every such officer should, with each return made by
him, pay into the Treasury of the United States
"any surplus of the fees and emoluments of his office which his
half-yearly return, so made as aforesaid, shall show to exist over
and above the compensations and allowances hereinbefore authorized
to be retained and paid by him."
10 Stat. 161, 166.
That statute did not mention the clerks of the territorial
Page 165 U. S. 507
courts. But by section 12 of the Civil Appropriation Act of
March 3, 1855, c. 175, the provisions of the act of 1853 were
extended to Utah and other territories, "as fully, in all
particulars, as they would be, had the word
territories' been
inserted in" the clause last quoted above from section 1 of that
act,
"after the word 'states,' and the same had read 'in the several
states and in the territories of the United States,' this clause to
take effect from and after the date of said act, and the accounting
officers will settle the accounts within its purview
accordingly."
10 Stat. 671.
By the express words, and the necessary effect, of this section
of the act of 1855, "the provisions," that is to say, all the
provisions, of the act of 1853, and, among others, those concerning
"clerks of the district and circuit courts . . . in the several
states" were extended to Utah and other territories, "as fully and
in all particulars" as if the clause "in the several states" had
read "in the several states and in the territories of the United
States." Clerks of district or circuit courts in the territories
were thus subjected not only to the fee bill established by the act
of 1853, but also to the directions of that act, that "clerks of
the district and circuit courts" should be allowed no other
compensation than the fees and costs therein specified; that they
should make half-yearly returns, "embracing all the fees and
emoluments of their respective offices, of every name and
character;" that "no clerk of a district court, or clerk of a
circuit court" should be allowed to retain, of the fees and
emoluments of his office, or, if holding both clerkships, of the
two offices, for his personal compensation a sum exceeding $3,500 a
year, and that every such clerk should pay any surplus into the
Treasury of the United States.
Notwithstanding this congressional legislation, the Legislature
of the Territory of Utah, by a statute of January 21, 1859, adopted
a fee bill for the clerks and other officers of the supreme court
and district courts of the territory differing from the fee bill
established by the acts of Congress of 1853 and 1855. Laws Utah
1851-1870, p. 71. And by a territorial statute of February 20,
1874, c. 23, a new fee bill was
Page 165 U. S. 508
adopted, also differing from that established by the acts of
Congress. Laws Utah 1874, p. 37.
By chapter 16 of Title 13, entitled "The Judiciary," of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, approved June 22, 1874,
Congress again, in section 823, established a fee bill, founded on
that of 1853, and enacted that the fees and costs therein
prescribed, "and no other compensation" should "be taxed and
allowed to . . . clerks of the circuit and district courts," and to
other officers and persons in those courts "in the several states
and territories, except in cases otherwise expressly provided by
law," in section 828 prescribed the "clerks� fees" for
different items of service; in sections 833, 839, and 844,
substantially reenacted the provisions of section 3 of the act of
1853, relating to the returns, the limit of the amount to be
retained, transferring, however, the supervision from the Secretary
of the Interior to the Attorney General in accordance with the Act
of June 22, 1870, c. 150, § 15, 16 Stat. 164, and the payment
of the surplus into the Treasury of the United States by clerks of
district and circuit courts; and, in section 1883, provided that
the fees and costs to be allowed "to the clerks of the supreme and
district courts" and other officers
"in the territories of the United States, shall be the same for
similar services by such persons, as prescribed in chapter 16, Tit.
'The Judiciary,' and no other compensation shall be taxed or
allowed."
And by Act of Congress of June 23, 1874, c. 469, § 7,
"the act of the Congress of the United States, entitled 'An act
to regulate the fees and costs to be allowed clerks, marshals and
attorneys of the circuit and district courts of the United States,
and for other purposes,' approved February 26, 1853, is extended
over, and shall apply to the fees of like officers in said
Territory of Utah, . . . and all laws of said territory,
inconsistent with the provisions of this act, are hereby
disapproved."
18 Stat. 256.
The words, "except in cases expressly otherwise provided by
law," in section 823 of the Revised Statutes, doubtless referred to
the cases (also excepted out of section 839) mentioned in sections
840 and 842, by the first of which "the clerks of the several
circuit and district courts in California, Oregon,
Page 165 U. S. 509
and Nevada" were entitled to charge double fees, and to retain
and be allowed a double maximum compensation, and by the other of
which, in prize causes, the clerks might be allowed to retain an
additional compensation not exceeding one-half of the usual
maximum.
With those exceptions, Congress thus, in 1874, by acts passed on
two successive days, Revised Statutes on June 22 and the other act
on June 23, substantially reenacted as including the territories
all the provisions of the acts of 1853 and 1855 and, in the Act of
June 23, 1874, as if to emphasize its intention to cover the whole
subject, both of the fees to be taxed and of the maximum amount
thereof to be retained by every clerk of a district court in the
Territory of Utah, expressly disapproved "all laws of said
territory inconsistent with the provisions of this act."
Yet the fee bill which had been adopted by the territorial
statute of February 20, 1874, was afterwards retained by the
Legislature of Utah in codifying the statutes of the territory.
Compiled Laws of Utah 1876, §§ 2378
et seq.; of
1888, §§ 5441
et seq.
By a provision inserted in the Civil Appropriation Act of March
3, 1883, c. 143, the clerk of the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia was subjected to sections 833 and 844 of the Revised
Statutes. 22 Stat. 631.
In
United States v. Averill, 130 U.
S. 335, this Court at October term, 1888, reversing the
judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah, reported in
4 Utah 416, adjudged that Congress, by the acts above referred to,
in extending to clerks of the district courts of the territory the
statutes applicable to clerks of district and circuit courts of the
United States in a State of the Union, included not only those
provisions which regulated the separate items and sums of fees to
be taxed and collected by the clerk, but also those provisions
which restricted the aggregate amount allowed or permitted to be
retained by him and those which required him to pay the surplus
into the Treasury of the United States.
Mr. Justice Blatchford, speaking for this Court, after reviewing
the legislation of Congress upon the subject, concluded as
Page 165 U. S. 510
follows:
"The fees mentioned in section 1883, as 'to be allowed' to
clerks of the district courts in the territories cover the fees to
be retained by them for compensation for services. Sections 823 and
839 are in chapter 16 of the title mentioned. They prescribe the
fees to be allowed to, and retained by, clerks of district courts,
'and no other compensation' can, under section 1883, be allowed to
be retained by clerks of the district courts in Utah for personal
compensation than is, by the provisions of chapter 16 of the title
mentioned, prescribed to be allowed to be retained by the clerks of
the district courts named in section 839, for personal
compensation."
130 U.S.
130 U. S.
340-341.
In that case, indeed, no question was presented as to the
classes of fees to be accounted for and to be included in
ascertaining the amounts to be retained by the clerks of the
district courts of the territory. And the position of the appellee
that, in all cases to which the United States were not a party, he
was entitled to fees taxed according to the territorial fee bill,
and was not bound to account for them to the United States, is
supported by an opinion given by the Attorney General to the first
Comptroller of the Treasury on December 2, 1891 (a copy of which
was annexed to the appellee's brief), as well as by the opinions of
the supreme court of the territory in
Marte v. Ogden City
Railway, 9 Utah 459, and in the present case. 10 Utah 184.
But that position appears to us to be inconsistent with the
manifest intent of Congress, apparent upon the face of the acts
above referred to, and with the reasoning upon which this Court
based its decision in
United States v. Averill, above
cited.
Doubtless the courts of a territory are not, strictly speaking,
courts of the United States, and do not come within the purview of
acts of Congress which speak of "courts of the United States" only.
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434,
80 U. S. 447;
Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S.
145,
98 U. S. 154;
McAllister v. United States, 141 U.
S. 174;
Thiede v. Utah, 159 U.
S. 510,
159 U. S.
514-515, and other cases there cited. But it is equally
indubitable that Congress, having the entire dominion and
sovereignty, national and municipal, federal and state, over
Page 165 U. S. 511
the territories of the United States so long as they remain in
the territorial condition, may itself directly legislate for any
territory or may extend the laws of the United States over it in
any particular that Congress may think fit. As said by Chief
Justice Waite, speaking for this Court:
"Congress may not only abrogate laws of the territorial
legislatures, but it may itself legislate directly for the local
government. It may make a void act of the territorial legislature
valid, and a valid act void. In other words, it has full and
complete legislative authority over the people of the territories
and all the departments of the territorial governments. It may do
for the territories what the people, under the Constitution of the
United States, may do for the states."
National Bank v. Yankton County, 101 U.
S. 129,
101 U. S. 133.
See also Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U. S.
1,
136 U. S. 44;
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 48, and
other cases there cited.
By the organic act of the Territory of Utah, as of other
territories of the United States, the legislative power of the
territory extended only "to all rightful subjects of legislation,
not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United
States;" all statutes of the territory, if disapproved by Congress,
were "to be null and of no effect," and the Constitution and all
laws of the United States not locally inapplicable were extended
over and declared to be in force in the territory. Act Sept. 9,
1850, c. 51, §§ 6, 17, 9 Stat. 454, 458; Rev.Stat.
§§ 1850, 1851, 1891.
In each territory, the supreme court and the district courts
were established, the general nature of their jurisdiction defined,
and the mode of appointment of their clerks prescribed, by
Congress, as appears in Title 23 of the Revised Statutes of the
United States. By section 1865 of those statutes, the district
courts were to be held by one of the justices of the supreme court
of the territory, appointed by the President under the Constitution
and laws of the United States. The district courts of the territory
were vested by section 1868 with general "chancery as well as
common law jurisdiction;" and by section 1910 with
"the same jurisdiction, in all cases arising under the
Constitution and laws of the United
Page 165 U. S. 512
States, as is vested in the circuit and district courts of the
United States,"
with a right of appeal to the supreme court of the territory.
And by section 1871, it was provided that there should be but one
clerk of each district court in the territory, appointed and
designated by the presiding judge, as well as that "only such
district clerk" should be entitled to a compensation from the
United States.
Congress, then, in the exercise of its sovereign and supreme
power of legislation over the territories of the United States, had
extended, in the clearest and fullest manner, to the clerks of the
district courts of the territories, all the provisions of the
statutes of the United States, establishing a fee bill and
restricting both the sums of the fees and emoluments to be received
and the maximum amount thereof to be retained by the clerks of the
courts of the United States held within a state, and it had
expressly disapproved all laws of the Territory of Utah
inconsistent with the legislation of Congress.
Among the provisions of the act of 1853, and of chapter 16 of
Title 13 of the Revised Statutes, expressly extended by Congress to
the territories, is the provision that the maximum personal
compensation of a clerk of a district court or of a circuit court
of the United States shall be no greater if he holds both
clerkships than if he holds only one. This clearly indicates the
intention of Congress that the maximum compensation of the clerk of
a territorial district court should not be increased even if his
fees and emoluments were derived from two distinct sources of
authority.
But the fees and emoluments of the appellee were not derived
from two offices or from two sources of authority, but from a
single office and a single appointment. Each district court of the
territory, vested by Congress with the jurisdiction which the
circuit and district courts of the United States have over cases
arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and
also with general jurisdiction at law and in equity, was, in the
execution of either branch of its authority, whether exercising
federal or general jurisdiction, one and the same court, deriving
its existence and its judicial powers from Congress, and its clerk,
whether dealing
Page 165 U. S. 513
with federal or with territorial business, was one and the same
clerk, holding a single appointment under an act of Congress and
from a judge commissioned by the President of the United
States.
Whenever Congress has considered the amount of the compensation
authorized to be received and retained by the clerk of a court,
either of the United States or of a territory, to be insufficient,
it has authorized him to charge double fees, and to be allowed a
double maximum compensation, as in the courts of the United States
held in the States of California, Oregon, and Nevada, by section
840 of the Revised Statutes, above cited; or to tax double fees,
without increasing his maximum compensation, as in the courts of
the Territories of New Mexico and Arizona by the Act of August 7,
1882, c. 436, 22 Stat. 344.
McGrew v. United States, 23
Ct.Cl. 273.
The United States have no greater interest, in cases to which
they are not a party, in a court of the United States than in a
territorial court. The acts of Congress regulating the fees to be
received, the accounts to be rendered, and the compensation to be
retained by the clerks are no more limited to cases or fees in
which the United States are interested in the district courts of
the territories than in the circuit and district courts of the
United States.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the fees received by
the appellee from private parties in civil actions and from the
territory on account of territorial business must be included in
his returns, and be considered in computing the aggregate
compensation to be allowed to and retained by him, and that to this
extent the judgment of the supreme court of the territory is
erroneous and must be reversed.
The question of the appellee's right to retain, or his duty to
account for, sums received by him in naturalization proceedings
depends upon distinct and peculiar considerations.
The only place, it is believed, in the statutes of the United
States in which fees received by the clerk in such proceedings have
ever been mentioned is in one of the earlier naturalization acts.
The Act of April 14, 1802, c. 28, enacted in section 1 that an
alien's declaration of intention to become
Page 165 U. S. 514
a citizen might be made before a court of record of one of the
states, or of a territory of the United States, or before a circuit
or district court of the United States; and, in section 2, that a
report in behalf of an applicant for naturalization, stating his
name, birthplace, age, nation, and allegiance, the country whence
he migrated, and the place of his intended settlement, should be
received and recorded by the clerk of the court, and that the clerk
should receive fifty cents for recording such report, and fifty
cents for a certificate thereof under his hand and seal of office.
2 Stat. 153. The provision as to clerk's fees has been omitted in
the later naturalization acts. Conkling's U.S. Pract. (4th ed.)
722; Rev.Stat. Tit. 30; Act Feb. 1, 1876, c. 5, 19 Stat. 2. And no
act of Congress regulating the fees and accounts of clerks of
courts has fixed the sums which they might charge or specifically
required them to account to the United States for services
performed for aliens presenting to the court, through the clerk,
preliminary declarations of intention to become citizens or final
applications for naturalization.
At the time of the passage of the naturalization act of 1802,
above referred to, the only statutes affecting the compensation of
clerks of the circuit and district courts of the United States
fixed their compensation at five dollars a day for attending court,
ten cents a mile for travel, such fees as were allowed in the
supreme court of the state, and a reasonable compensation, to be
allowed by the court, for any kind of service for which the laws of
the state made no allowance. Acts March 3, 1791, c. 22, § 2;
Acts May 8, 1792, c. 36, § 3; 1 Stat. 217, 277. The earliest
legislation restricting the aggregate amount which clerks might
retain or requiring any returns from them was in the Appropriation
Act of March 3, 1841, c. 35, and the provisions of section 3 of the
act of 1853, already cited, had their origin in the appropriation
Act of May 18, 1842, c. 29, No. 167, which, however, vested in the
Secretary of the Treasury the supervisory power over their
accounts, afterwards transferred to the Secretary of the Interior
by the Act of March 3, 1849, c. 108, § 4, and to the Attorney
General by the Act of June 22, 1870, c. 150, § 15, 5 Stat.
427, 483; 9
Page 165 U. S. 515
Stat. 395; 16 Stat. 164. By the Act of August 16, 1856, c. 124,
§ 1, reenacted in section 846 of the Revised Statutes, their
accounts were to be examined and certified by the district judge,
before being presented to the accounting officers of the Treasury
for settlement, and to be then subject to revision upon their
merits by those officers. 11 Stat. 49.
The case of
United States v. Hill, 120 U.
S. 169, arose in this way: it was an action brought
December 4, 1884, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Massachusetts, by the United States upon the official
bond of the clerk, appointed in 1879, of the district court for
that district, to recover a large amount of fees of one dollar and
two dollars each, respectively, charged and received by him for a
declaration of intention to become a citizen, and for a final
naturalization and certificate thereof. The judgment of the circuit
court, reported in 25 F. 375, in favor of the defendants was
affirmed by this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Blatchford at
October term, 1886, upon the following grounds: section 823 of the
Revised Statutes, reenacting section 1 of the act of 1853, applies
prima facie to taxable costs and fees in ordinary suits
between party and party prosecuted in a court. There is no
specification of naturalization matters in the fees of clerks. From
as early as 1839, it had been the practice of the clerks of the
courts of the United States for that district to charge the fees of
one dollar and two dollars in naturalization proceedings, in gross
sums, without any division for specific services according to any
items of the fee bill. The clerk of the district court had never
included these fees in his returns of fees and emoluments. From
1842 and including 1884, his accounts were examined and approved by
the district judge. They then went from 1842 to 1849 to the
Secretary of the Treasury, from 1849 to 1870 to the Secretary of
the Interior, and since 1870 to the Attorney General, and they
were, during this long period, examined and adjusted by the
accounting officers of the Treasury, with the naturalization fees
not included. This long practice amounted to a contemporaneous and
continuous construction of the statute by the concurring
interpretation of judicial and executive officers
Page 165 U. S. 516
charged with the duty of carrying out its provisions. 120 U.S.
120 U. S. 181,
120 U. S.
182.
After that decision, the clerks of the courts of the United
States in Massachusetts, and in some other states, at least,
continued to omit, in the returns of their official fees and
emoluments, sums received for their services in naturalization
proceedings, and attempts made, from time to time, to require them
to include such fees in their returns, have proved unsuccessful.
United States v. Hill, 123 U. S. 681;
Attorney General's Report for 1890, p. xx.; 52d Cong. (1st Sess.)
H.R. Bills 9612, 9613, Reports No.1966, pp. 22, 23, and Nos.1969,
1970; 53d Cong. (1st Sess.) H.R. Bill 3963, Report No. 111.
In the Fifty-Second Congress, on July 21, 1892, the committee on
the judiciary of the House of Representatives reported a bill,
approved by the Attorney General and by the first Comptroller of
the Treasury, entitled
"A bill to amend section 833 of the Revised Statutes of the
United States, relating to semiannual returns of fees by district
attorneys, marshals and clerks,"
and purporting to amend that section by inserting, after the
words, "all fees and emoluments of his office, of every name and
character," the words, "including all naturalization fees," and by
requiring each clerk's return to contain "a true statement of all
naturalization fees." On January 17, 1893, the bill was amended in
the house by adding at its close these words: "That in each of the
three Judicial Districts of the State of Alabama, there shall be a
district attorney and a marshal," and, as amended, was passed by
the house and sent to the Senate. On February 13, 1893, the
committee on the judiciary of the Senate reported that the bill be
amended by striking out all after the enacting clause, except the
words which had been added by amendment in the house, and the bill
in this shape, with its title amended accordingly, and thus leaving
out everything relating to returns of fees, was passed by both
houses, vetoed by the President, and passed over the veto. 52d
Cong. (1st Sess.) H.R. Bill 9612, Report No.1969; 24 Cong.Rec. 649,
1508, 1582, 1656, 1661, 2287, 2381, 2433, 2523, 2524; Act March 3,
1893, c. 220, 27 Stat. 745
Page 165 U. S. 517
The judiciary committee of the House of Representatives, on the
same day on which they reported that bill, also reported a bill,
having the like approval, entitled "A bill to amend section 828 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, relating to clerks'
fees" and purporting to amend that section by adding at the end
thereof, these words: "For filing declaration of intention to
become a citizen by an alien, one dollar; for final papers and all
services connected therewith, two dollars." This bill, after being
passed by the house, was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
of the Senate, and no further proceedings thereon appear to have
been had. 52d Cong., 1st Sess., H.R. Bill 9613, Report No.1970; 24
Cong.Rec. 650, 684.
In the next Congress, a bill embodying the provisions of those
two bills was reported by the committee on the judiciary of the
House of Representatives, passed by the house, referred to the
committee on the judiciary of the Senate, and not afterwards heard
of. 53d Cong., 1st Sess., H.R. Bill 3963, Report No. 111; 25
Cong,Rec. 2608, 2657, 2663, 2710.
Congress not having legislated upon the subject since the
decision of this Court in
United States v. Hill,
120 U. S. 169, and
no special usage or sound reason being shown for not applying a
uniform rule in all the courts established by authority of Congress
in the states and in the territories, the Supreme Court of the
Territory of Utah rightly held, in accordance with that decision,
that the appellee was not obliged to return to the United States,
as part of the emoluments of his office, sums received for his
services in naturalization proceedings.
But the erroneous ruling of that court upon the other branch of
the case requires its
Judgment to be reversed, and the case remanded, pursuant to
the Act of July 16, 1894, c. 138, section 17, 28 Stat. 111, to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Utah for
further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.