In 1850, Price, a purser in the Navy and fiscal agent. for that
Department, advanced $75,000 to the government from his private
fortune, to meet emergencies. His right to receive it back was
questioned, and was not settled until 1891, when Congress passed an
act directing the Secretary of the Treasury to adjust his account
"on principles of equity and justice," and to pay to him "or to his
heirs" the sum found due him on such adjustment. It was adjusted by
the Secretary, and in August, 1892, it was decided that there was
due to Price from the United States $76,204.08. Meanwhile, Forrest
had recovered in the courts of New Jersey, of which Price was a
citizen and resident, a judgment against him for $17,000. Forrest
died in 1860 without having collected the amount of this judgment.
In 1874, his widow, having been appointed administratrix of his
Page 173 U. S. 411
estate, caused the judgment to be revived by writ of
scire
facias and asked for the appointment of a receiver. Price
appeared and answered, and then the cause slept until August, 1892,
when Mrs. Forrest filed a petition, stating that money was about to
be paid to Price by the United States on his claim, and asking for
the appointment of a receiver of the Treasury draft, and that Price
be ordered to endorse it to the receiver, to the end that the
amount might be received by him as an officer of the court and
disposed of according to law. A receiver was appointed, gave bond,
and entered on his duties. Price died in 1894. He left no will. No
letters of administration were granted, but the New Jersey court
appointed an administrator
ad prosequendum. The bill in
this case was then filed. The relief sought was the revival of the
bill of 1874, that the administrator
ad prosequendum be
made a party, and that the other parties be enjoined from receiving
the money from the Treasury and that the receiver be authorized to
receive and dispose of it under the orders of the court. The heirs
of Price set up their claims to it. The court held that the
plaintiffs were entitled to the moneys in the Treasury, and its
judgment was affirmed by the highest court in the state.
Held that the receiver, and not the heir, was the person
entitled to recover the money from the United States, and that the
case did not come within the prohibitory provisions against
assignments of claims against the United States contained in
Rev.Stat. § 3477.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The ultimate question in this case is whether the plaintiffs in
error, as heirs of Rodman M. Price, are entitled to receive from
the United States the amount standing to the credit of the deceased
on the books of the Treasury, and which represents the balance of a
sum found in his lifetime, under the authority of a special act of
Congress, to be due him upon an adjustment of his accounts as a
purser in the Navy.
The facts out of which arise the questions of law discussed by
counsel are as follows:
In the year 1848, the decedent was assigned to duty on the
Pacific Coast, in California, as purser and fiscal agent of the
Page 173 U. S. 412
United States for the Department of the Navy. He acted in that
capacity until about December, 1849, or January, 1850, when he was
detached from such service and ordered to transfer all public money
and property remaining in his hands to his successor or to such
other disbursing officer of the Navy as might be designated by the
commanding officer at the naval station at California, and
immediately after such transfer to report at the City of Washington
for the purpose of settling his accounts.
A. M. Van Nostrand was his successor in California as acting
purser in the Navy.
About December 31, 1849, Commodore Jones, of the Navy,
commanding the United States squadron at San Francisco, directed
Van Nostrand to receive from Price all books, papers, office
furniture, and funds on hand belonging to the purser's department
at that city. Thereupon Price turned over to Van Nostrand, as
acting purser of the Navy at San Francisco, $45,000, that being all
the public money remaining in his hands.
Subsequently, on the 14th day of January, 1850, and out of his
private funds alone, Price advanced to Van Nostrand $75,000, taking
a receipt therefor as follows:
"San Francisco, January 14, 1850. Received from Rodman M. Price,
purser U.S. Navy, seventy-five thousand dollars, for which I hold
myself responsible to the United States Treasury Department.
$75,000. (Duplicate.) A.M. Van Nostrand, Acting Purser."
This money was so advanced without the approval and signature of
Commodore Jones.
Van Nostrand never returned the $75,000, or any part of it, to
Price, nor did he account for it to the government.
Price insisted that the United States should reimburse him for
the amount so advanced by him, but the officers of the government
denied its liability to him on that account. In an elaborate
opinion given March 12, 1854, Attorney General Cushing held that
while the appointment of Van Nostrand as acting purser was lawful
and valid under the circumstances, the government could not be
charged with the private funds paid to him by Price, although the
latter believed
Page 173 U. S. 413
at the time that his advance of money to the former was an
accommodation to the government in the then unsettled condition of
California. 6 Op. Atty.Gen. 357.
Finally, by an Act approved February 23, 1891, entitled "An act
for the relief of Rodman M. Price," the Secretary of the Treasury
of the United States was
"authorized and directed to adjust, upon principles of equity
and justice, the accounts of Rodman M. Price, late purser in the
United States Navy and acting Navy agent at San Francisco,
California, crediting him with the sum paid over to and receipted
for by his successor, A.M. Van Nostrand, acting purser, January 14,
1850, and pay to said Rodman M. Price, or his heirs, out of any
money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, any sum that may
be found due him upon such adjustment."
Under the authority conferred by that act, the Secretary of the
Treasury in August, 1892, adjusted the accounts of Price, and in
that adjustment he was credited with the sum advanced to Van
Nostrand, leaving due to him from the government the sum of
$76,204.08, which, of course, included the above sum of
$75,000.
In order that the precise questions to be determined upon this
writ of error may be clearly apprehended, we must now refer to
certain matters occurring in the courts of New Jersey, both prior
to and shortly after the passage of the above Act of February 23,
1891.
In the year 1857, Samuel Forrest recovered in the Supreme Court
of New Jersey a judgment against Rodman M. Price for the sum of
$17,000 and costs. Execution upon that judgment was returned
unsatisfied. Forrest died in 1860 intestate. In 1874, his wife, one
of the present defendants in error, was appointed and qualified as
administratrix of his estate. In the same year, she sued out a writ
of
scire facias to revive the above judgment, and it was
revived. In the bill seeking a revivor of the judgment, she alleged
facts tending to show that Price had an interest in certain lands,
and also that he had equitable things in action or other property
to the amount of many thousand dollars, exclusive of all claims
thereon and
Page 173 U. S. 414
of all exemptions allowed by law, which she had been unable to
reach by execution on the above judgment. By that bill, the
administratrix also prayed discovery from Price of all property,
real or personal, whether in possession or action, belonging to
him, with full particulars in relation thereto, and that the same,
under the order of court, be appropriated in satisfaction of such
judgment; further, that a receiver be appointed in the cause to
collect and take charge of the property, money, or things in action
found to belong to Price, or to which he was in any way entitled,
either in law or equity, with power to convert the same into money,
and with such other powers as were usually granted to receivers in
similar cases, and that Price be enjoined from assigning,
transferring, or making any other disposition of the real estate
and personal property to which he was in any wise entitled, and
from receiving any moneys then due or to become due to him except
where the same were held in trust or the funds held in trust
proceeded from other persons than himself.
The defendants to that bill were Price and his wife and son, the
latter being alleged to claim some interest in the property
described in the bill. They appeared and filed an answer, Price
denying that any part of the properties mentioned in the bill
belonged to him, or that he had any interest in them.
After the filing of that answer, the cause slept until August 9,
1892, when Mrs. Forrest, as administratrix of the estate of her
husband, filed a petition stating that, since the filing of her
bill of complaint in that cause, no payment had been made on the
judgment against Price, and that neither she nor her solicitors had
been able to find any personalty or real estate belonging to Price
by levy upon and sale of which any part of the amount due on the
judgment could be obtained; that it had lately come to her
knowledge that about $45,000 was about to be paid to Price by
officers of the Treasury of the United States as the sum found to
be due him by an accounting then lately had between him and the
government; that that sum was to be paid by the delivery to Price
or to his attorneys of a draft of the Treasurer of the United
States, or some other negotiable security made or issued by its
financial
Page 173 U. S. 415
officers, and drawn payable to his order, the rules of the
department forbidding that it be made payable to the order of any
other person, or that said sum should be paid in any other way, and
that said draft or negotiable security was to be made, and the
transaction closed, on the 15th day of August thereafter, and that
if Price obtained said money from the United States, he would,
unless restrained, put the same beyond the reach of the petitioner.
The prayer of the petition was that a receiver of the draft or
other negotiable security be appointed, and that Price be ordered
and directed, immediately on the receipt of such draft or security,
to endorse the same to the receiver, to the end that the amount
thereof might be received by him
as an officer of the court and
disposed of according to law.
On the presentation of the petition, with affidavits in its
support, the chancellor, on the 8th day of August, 1892, issued a
rule, returnable at chancery chambers September 12th following,
that Price show cause why the prayer of the petition should not be
granted, and an injunction issue, and a receiver be appointed,
pursuant to that prayer, which rule further directed that Price
should be, and was thereby, restrained and enjoined from making any
endorsement of the draft referred to in the petition.
A duly certified copy of that order, pursuant to directions
therein, was served upon Price on the 10th day of August, 1892.
Nevertheless, after that date, Price received from the Assistant
Treasurer of the United States at Washington, and without
permission of the court collected, four several drafts, signed by
that officer, for the respective sums of $2,704.08, $13,500,
$20,000, and $9,000, in all the sum of $45,204.08; leaving in the
hands of the United States, of the amount due on the settlement of
Price's accounts, the sum of about $31,000.
On the 10th day of October, 1892, Charles Borcherling was
appointed by the Chancery Court receiver in said cause of the
property and things in action belonging or due to, or held in trust
for, Price at the time of issuing said executions or at any time
afterwards, and especially of said four drafts, with authority to
possess, receive, and sue for such property and
Page 173 U. S. 416
things in action and the evidence thereof, and it was made the
duty of the receiver to hold such drafts
subject to the further
order of the court. The receiver was required to give bond in
the sum of $40,000, conditioned for the faithful discharge of his
duties. At the same time, Price was ordered to convey and deliver
to the receiver all such property and things in action and the
evidence thereof, and especially forthwith to endorse and deliver
the drafts to him, and he and all agents or attorneys appointed by
him were enjoined and restrained from intermeddling with the
receiver in regard to said drafts, and ordered, if in possession or
control thereof, to deliver them to the receiver with an
endorsement to that officer or to the clerk of the court for
deposit, provided the order should be void if the drafts, other
than the one for $9,000, were delivered with Price's endorsement to
the clerk, the proceeds to be deposited to the credit of the cause.
Price was expressly enjoined from making any endorsement or
appropriation of the drafts other than to the receiver or the clerk
for deposit.
The receiver gave the required bond and, having entered upon the
duties of his office, he caused a copy of the above order to be
served upon Price and demanded compliance with its provisions.
In 1892, the particular day not being stated, the Chancery Court
issued an attachment against Price for contempt of court in
disobeying the order of August 8, 1892. By an order made May 18,
1894, the court held him to be guilty of such contempt, and he was
directed to pay to the receiver the sum of $31,704.08, and a fine
of $50 and costs, and, in default of obedience to that order, to be
imprisoned in the county jail until it was complied with. 52
N.J.Eq. 16, 31. Upon appeal to the Court of Errors and Appeals, the
order of the Chancery Court was affirmed. 53 N.J.Eq. 693.
It is stated that the balance due on the settlement of Price's
accounts, about $31,000, was withheld by the officers of the
government in the belief that there was a counterclaim against
Price. But, it having been determined to pay such balance, the
Chancery Court made another order, on the
Page 173 U. S. 417
18th day of May, 1894, by which Price was directed to execute
two instruments in writing, which he had been previously required
by the court to sign, seal, and deliver, one of them consenting
that the balance from the government should be paid to the
receiver, such consent to be filed with the Treasurer of the United
States, and by the other assigning all his property, real and
personal, and all his rights and credits.
These last two orders were served upon Price while he was sick,
and he died June 8, 1894, without complying with either of them. So
far as was known, he left no will, and no application had been made
for the appointment of an administrator of his estate, as in case
of intestacy. But letters of administration
ad
prosequendum were granted by the Prerogative Court of New
Jersey to Allen L. McDermott.
The present bill was filed in the Chancery Court, July 5, 1894,
in the name of the administratrix of Samuel Forrest and of the
receiver, Borcherling. The principal defendants are the children
and heirs of Rodman M. Price. The other defendants are John C. Fay
and McDermott, the latter as administrator
ad
prosequendum.
That bill alleged that on the 9th day of June, 1894, the
defendants executed powers of attorney to the defendant Fay, who
was one of the attorneys in the litigation respecting the drafts,
authorizing him to apply to the Secretary of the Treasury to pay to
them the balance to the credit of Price under the Act of February
23, 1891, they claiming that such balance belongs to his heirs, and
not to the receiver. It appears from the bill that, in addition to
the above four drafts, the United States paid to Price and his
attorneys the further sum of $9,000, reducing the balance
apparently on the books of the Treasury under the above settlement
to the sum of about $23,000. It was further alleged that the
officers of the Treasury Department were desirous of doing right
and justice in the premises; that demand had been made by the
receiver upon the Treasurer of the United States for the payment to
him of said balance of money, and that the Treasurer neither
consented nor refused to do so, but awaited the determination
Page 173 U. S. 418
by some lawful tribunal of the right of the receiver in the
premises.
The relief asked was: 1. that the cause commenced by the bill of
1874 be revived, and the administrator
ad prosequendum be
adjudged a proper party thereto; 2. that the defendants the
children and heirs of Rodman M. Price, together with Fay, be
perpetually enjoined from making any demand upon, or application
to, the United States, or from receiving any part of the money
awarded to the deceased then remaining in the Treasury of the
United States; 3. that the parties above named be decreed to pay to
the plaintiff Borcherling, receiver, to be by him disposed of under
the orders of the court, any part of the money they might have
respectively received or might receive; 4. that the administrator
ad prosequendum, or any executor or administrator of Price
thereafter admitted as defendant in the cause, deliver to the
receiver all the property of the deceased, whether in possession or
action, which might come to their hands.
The heirs of Price filed pleas asserting their right to the
benefit of the Act of February 23, 1891. The case was heard upon
the bill and pleas, and the pleas were overruled by Chancellor
McGill. The defendants were thereupon ordered to answer the
bill.
Upon appeal to the Court of Errors and Appeals, the order of the
Chancery Court was affirmed and the cause was remitted to that
court with directions to proceed therein according to law.
Price v. Forrest, 54 N.J.Eq. 669.
The heirs then filed an answer in which they denied that there
was any jurisdiction in the Chancery Court to sequester the moneys
in dispute in the Treasury of the United States and insisted that
whatever amount remained in the Treasury as the balance due on the
adjustment of the accounts of Rodman M. Price belonged, under the
act of Congress, to the defendants as his heirs.
The case was heard upon bill and answer, and the Chancery Court
was of opinion that the plaintiffs were entitled to the relief
asked so far as it related to the collection by the defendants of
the moneys mentioned in the bill of complaint and still
Page 173 U. S. 419
in the Treasury of the United States. It was therefore
"ordered and decreed that the said defendants, and each of them,
be, and they are hereby, perpetually enjoined and restrained from
making any demand upon, or application to, the government of the
United States, or the Secretary of the Treasury of the United
States, or any officer of the said Treasury, or from receiving from
the United States, or its said Secretary of the Treasury, or any
officer thereof, any part of the money remaining in the Treasury of
the United States at the time of filing said bill of complaint, and
which was awarded to Rodman M. Price, deceased, as in the said bill
stated, or now there remaining."
This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals of
New Jersey, 56 N.J.Eq. ___, and the judgment of affirmance is here
for review.
1. The first proposition of the plaintiffs in error is that,
consistently with the statutes of the United States, the defendants
in error cannot take anything under the orders adjudging that
Borcherling, the receiver appointed by the state court, was
entitled, as between him and the heirs of Price, to receive the
money remaining to his credit on the books of the Treasury.
This contention is based upon section 3477 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States, providing that
"all transfers and assignments made of any claim upon the United
States, or of any part or share thereof, or interest therein,
whether absolute or conditional, and whatever may be the
consideration therefor, and all powers of attorney, orders or other
authorities for receiving payment of any such claim, or of any part
or share thereof, shall be absolutely null and void unless they are
freely made and executed in the presence of at least two attesting
witnesses, after the allowance of such a claim, the ascertainment
of the amount due and the issuing of a warrant for the payment
thereof. Such transfers, assignments, and powers of attorney must
recite the warrant for payment, and must be acknowledged by the
person making them before an officer having authority to take
acknowledgments of deeds, and shall be certified by the officer,
and it must appear by the certificate that the officer at the time
of the acknowledgment, read
Page 173 U. S. 420
and fully explained the transfer, assignment, or warrant of
attorney to the person acknowledging the same."
It is insisted that the orders in the state court assume to
transfer or assign Price's claim against the United States in
violation or without regard to the requirements of that statute in
that no assignment of the claim has ever been freely made, that no
warrant for the payment thereof had been issued when those orders
were made, and that the endorsement or assignment that Price was
ordered to make did not fall within any of the established
exceptions, under section 3477, such as assignments in bankruptcy
and insolvency, and assignments by operation of law.
Are these propositions supported by the decisions of this Court
in which it has been found necessary to construe that section?
In
United States v. Gillis, 95 U. S.
407,
95 U. S. 416,
the question was as to the validity of a voluntary transfer of the
legal title to a claim under the Abandoned and Captured Property
Act of March 12, 1863, for the proceeds of certain cotton seized by
the military forces of the United States. The suit was brought by
the transferee in the Court of Claims, which found in his favor. By
this Court it was adjudged that he could not maintain the action.
While holding that the Act of February 26, 1853, c. 81, 10 Stat.
170, from which section 3477 was taken, was of universal
application and covered all claims against the United States in
every tribunal in which they might be asserted, this Court stated
that "there are devolutions of title by force of law, without any
act of parties, or involuntary assignments compelled by law," to
which the statute did not apply.
In
Erwin v. United States, 97 U. S.
392,
97 U. S. 397,
which was also an action to recover the proceeds of certain cotton
captured by the military forces of the United States, it appeared
that the original claimant became a bankrupt, and assigned his
property to an assignee in bankruptcy. One of the questions was
whether the claim for these proceeds, even if it constituted a
demand against the government, was capable of assignment under the
above statute. This Court said:
Page 173 U. S. 421
"The Act of Congress of February 26, 1853, to prevent frauds
upon the Treasury of the United States, which was the subject of
consideration in the
Gillis case, applies only to cases of
voluntary assignment of demands against the government. It does not
embrace cases where there has been a transfer of title by operation
of law. The passing of claims to heirs, devisees, or assignees in
bankruptcy are not within the evil at which the statute aimed, nor
does the construction given by this Court deny to such parties a
standing in the Court of Claims."
In
Goodman v. Niblack, 102 U.
S. 556,
102 U. S. 560,
where the question was whether the above statute embraced voluntary
assignments for the benefit of creditors, this Court, referring to
Erwin v. United States, said:
"The language of the statute, 'all transfers and assignments of
any claim upon the United States, or of any part thereof, or any
interest therein,' is broad enough (if such were the purpose of
Congress) to include transfers by operation of law, or by will. Yet
we held it did not include a transfer by operation of law, or in
bankruptcy, and we said it did not include one by will. The obvious
reason of this is that there can be no purpose in such cases to
harass the government by multiplying the number of persons with
whom it has to deal, nor any danger of enlisting improper
influences in advocacy of the claim, and that the exigencies of the
party who held it justified and required the transfer that was
made. In what respect does the voluntary assignment for the benefit
of his creditors, which is made by an insolvent of all his effects,
which must, if it be honest, include a claim against the
government, differ from the assignment which is made in bankruptcy?
There can here be no intent to bring improper means to bear in
establishing the claim, and it is not perceived how the government
can be embarrassed by such an assignment. The claim is not
specifically mentioned, and is obviously included only for the just
and proper purpose of appropriating the whole of his effects to the
payment of all his debts. We cannot believe that such a meritorious
act as this comes within the evil which Congress sought to suppress
by the act of 1853. "
Page 173 U. S. 422
The doctrine of these cases has not been modified by any
subsequent decision. Nor, as the argument at the bar implied, is
that doctrine inconsistent with the decision subsequently rendered
in
St. Paul & Duluth Railroad v. United States,
112 U. S. 733.
Nothing more was adjudged in that case than that a voluntary
transfer, by way of mortgage, of a claim against the United States
for the security of a debt, and finally completed and made absolute
by a judicial sale, was within the purview of the prohibition
contained in section 3477, and could not be made the basis of an
action against the government in the Court of Claims. Such a
voluntary assignment to secure a specific debt was held to be
within the mischiefs which that section was intended to remedy. To
the same class belongs
Ball v. Halsell, 161 U. S.
72,
161 U. S. 79,
which was the case of a voluntary transfer of part of a claim
against the United States on account of the depredations of certain
Indians on the property of the claimant.
While the present case differs from any former case in its
facts, we think that the principle announced in
Erwin v. United
States and
Goodman v. Niblack justified the
conclusion reached by the state court. That court held that it has
jurisdiction under the laws of the state, and as between the
parties before it, to put into the hands of its receiver any chose
in action of whatever nature belonging to Price and of which he had
possession or control. The receiver did not obtain from Price in
his lifetime an assignment of his claim against the United States.
But, having full jurisdiction over him, the court adjudged that as
between Price and the plaintiffs who sued him, the claim should not
be disposed of by him to the injury of his creditors, but should be
placed in the hands of its receiver, subject to such disposition as
the court might determine as between the parties before it and as
was consistent with law. The suit in which the receiver was
appointed was, of course, primarily for the purpose of securing the
payment of the judgment obtained by Samuel Forrest in his lifetime
against Rodman M. Price. But that fact does not distinguish the
case in principle from
Goodman v. Niblack, for the
transfer in question to the receiver was the act
Page 173 U. S. 423
of the law, and whatever remained, whether of property or money,
in his hands after satisfying the judgment and the taxes, costs, or
expenses of the receivership as might be ordered by the court would
be held by him as trustee for those entitled thereto, and his duty
would be to pay such balance into court to the credit of the cause,
"to be there disposed of according to law." Revision of N.J. Laws,
1877, sec. 26, p. 394.
As this Court has said, the object of Congress by section 3477
was to protect the government, and not the claimant, and to prevent
frauds upon the Treasury.
Bailey v. United States,
109 U. S. 432;
Hobbs v. McLean, 117 U. S. 576;
Freedman's Savings Co. v. Shepherd, 127 U.
S. 494,
127 U. S. 506.
There was no purpose to aid those who had claims for money against
the United States in disregarding the just demands of their
creditors. We perceive nothing in the words or object of the
statute that prevents any court of competent jurisdiction as to
subject matter and parties from making such orders as may be
necessary or appropriate to prevent one who has a claim for money
against the government from withdrawing the proceeds of such claim
from the reach of his creditors, provided such orders do not
interfere with the examination and allowance or rejection of such
claim by the proper officers of the government nor in any wise
obstruct any action that such officers may legally take under the
statutes relating to the allowance or payment of claims against the
United States. If a court in an action against such claimant by one
of his creditors should, for the protection of the creditor, forbid
the claimant from collecting his demand except through a receiver,
who should hold the proceeds subject to be disposed of according to
law under the order of court, we are unable to say that such action
would be inconsistent with section 3477. It may be that the
officers charged with the duty of allowing or disallowing claims
against the government are not required to recognize a receiver of
a claim appointed by a court, and may, if the claim be allowed,
refuse to make payment except as provided in section 3477. Upon
this subject, the second Comptroller of the Treasury, in his
opinion rendered July
Page 173 U. S. 424
11, 1894, construing the Act of February 23, 1891, and in which
he held that Price was entitled to receive in his lifetime whatever
sum was found to be due him on the adjustment of his accounts, but
if he died before such adjustment was made his heirs would take not
by virtue of the act of Congress, but according to the laws of
descent at the domicile of the deceased, said:
"I do not presume for a moment that the Chancery Court of New
Jersey could issue an execution and compel payment of this money,
nor could any of its powers be brought to bear to compel, without
at least additional legislation by Congress, the Comptroller to pay
its judgment; but while that is true, yet, on the other hand, the
Comptroller, so far having awaited the adjudication of that
Chancery Court, ought to abide by the result of that litigation,
and await a final adjudication and certification of the amount, as
to who are entitled under the laws of that state. This comes more
from comity and from a disposition on the part of the Treasury
officers to obey the laws of the land and to help to enforce the
decrees of the courts that have jurisdiction over matters in
litigation of this kind than from any actual authority that a court
may have over the Comptroller to compel him to make payment. In
conclusion, then, the Comptroller will not at this time act in this
matter, but will say to the gentlemen that they must fight it out
in the courts of New Jersey, and that this Court will follow the
final decision that may be rendered there. . . . Hence this matter
will be suspended until such time as the Comptroller may be put
into possession of the final decree either of the New Jersey
Chancery Court or such court as may have appellate jurisdiction
therefrom."
Even if it be true that the final order of the state court in
relation to the money in question would not impose any legal duty
upon the officers of the Treasury, it does not follow that the
order of court appointing the receiver would be null and void as
between those who are parties to the cause and who are before the
court.
It only remains to say, touching this part of the case, that if
section 3477 does not embrace the passing or transfer of claims to
heirs, devisees, or assignees in bankruptcy, as held
Page 173 U. S. 425
in
Erwin v. United States, nor a voluntary assignment
by a debtor of his effects for the benefit of his creditors, as
held in
Goodman v. Niblack, it is difficult to see how an
order of a judicial tribunal having jurisdiction of the parties
appointing a receiver of a claim against the government, and
ordering the claimant to assign the same to such receiver to be
held subject to the order of court for the benefit of those
entitled thereto, can be regarded as prohibited by that
section.
2. Were the heirs of Rodman M. Price entitled upon his death, by
virtue of the Act of February 23, 1891, to such balance as then
remained to his credit in the Treasury of the United States on the
adjustment made of his a counts under that act? If they were so
entitled, then the final judgment of the Court of Errors and
Appeals affirming the judgment of the Chancery Court denied to the
plaintiffs in error a right specially set up and claimed by them
under the above act, and therefore the jurisdiction of this Court
to reexamine that final judgment cannot be doubted. Rev.Stat.
§ 709.
The plaintiffs in error insist that
Emerson v.
Hall, 13 Pet. 409,
38 U. S.
413-414, is decisive in their favor. Although this
contention is not without some force, we are of opinion that the
judgment in that case does not control the determination of the
present case. Emerson, surveyor, Chew, collector, and Lorrain,
naval officer at the port of New Orleans, having seized a brig for
a violation of the laws prohibiting the importation of slaves,
instituted proceedings that resulted in the condemnation of such
vessel and slaves. It had been previously decided in
The Josefa
Segunda, 10 Wheat. 312, that the proceeds could not
be paid to the custom-house officers, but vested in the United
States. Emerson and Lorrain having died, Congress, on the 31st day
of March, 1831, passed an act entitled "An act for the relief of
Beverly Chew, the heirs of William Emerson, deceased, and the heirs
of Edward Lorrain, deceased." That act directed the proceeds in
court to be paid over to the said Beverly Chew and "the legal
representatives" of Emerson and Lorrain, respectively. The question
was whether the Emerson part of the proceeds belonged to his heirs,
or were assets primarily liable for his
Page 173 U. S. 426
debts. This Court, after observing that Emerson had not acted
under any law nor by virtue of any authority, and that his acts
imposed no obligation, legal or equitable, on the government to
compensate him for his services, said:
"Had Emerson become insolvent and made an assignment, would this
claim, if it may be called a claim, have passed to his assignees?
We think clearly it would not. Under such an assignment, what could
have passed? The claim is a nonentity. Neither in law nor in equity
has it any existence. A benefit was voluntarily conferred on the
government, but this was not done at the request of any officer of
the government or under the sanction of any law or authority,
express or implied. And under such circumstances, can a claim be
raised against the government which shall pass by a legal
assignment or go into the hands of an administrator as assets? . .
. A claim having no foundation in law, but depending entirely on
the generosity of the government, constitutes no basis for the
action of any legal principle. It cannot be assigned. It does not
go to the administrator as assets. It does not descend to the heir.
And if the government, from motives of public policy or any other
considerations, shall think proper under such circumstances to make
a grant of money to the heirs of the claimant, they receive it as a
gift or pure donation -- a donation made, it is true, in reference
to some meritorious act of their ancestor, but which did not
constitute a matter of right against the government. In the present
case, the government might have directed the money to be paid to
the creditors of Emerson, or to any part of his heirs. Being the
donor, it could, in the exercise of its discretion, make such
distribution or application of its bounty as circumstances might
require. And it has, under the title of an act 'for the relief of
the heirs of Emerson,' directed, in the body of the act, the money
to be paid to his legal representatives. That the heirs were
intended by this designation is clear, and we think the payment
which has been made to them under this act has been rightfully
made, and that the fund cannot be considered as assets in their
hands for the payment of debts. "
Page 173 U. S. 427
Now it is said that the grounds upon which, in
Emerson v.
Hall, the claim of the heirs was sustained exist in the
present case; that Price did not act under any law, nor in virtue
of any authority, and that his acts imposed no obligation in law or
equity upon the government that could have been enforced even if
suit could have been maintained against it. And the conclusion
sought to be drawn is that Congress must have intended by the act
of 1891, as it was held to have intended by the act in
Emerson's case, to legislate for the benefit of the heirs
or next of kin of the decedent, and not for his personal
representatives. But there were other facts in the
Emerson
case which placed that case upon peculiar grounds. Emerson and
Lorrain were both dead when the Act of March 3, 1831, was passed,
and therefore Congress must have had in mind the question whether
the Emerson and Lorrain portions of the money on deposit in court
should be given to their respective heirs or not. And the question
was solved as indicated by the preamble to that act. The preamble
distinctly shows that Congress had in view the heirs, and not those
who would administer the estate of the two persons whose
meritorious services were recognized. Although a preamble has been
said to be a key to open the understanding of a statute, we must
not be understood as adjudging that a statute, clear and
unambiguous in its enacting parts, may be so controlled by its
preamble as to justify a construction plainly inconsistent with the
words used in the body of the statute. We mean only to hold that
the preamble may be referred to in order to assist in ascertaining
the intent and meaning of a statute fairly susceptible of different
constructions.
United States v.
Fisher, 2 Cranch 358,
6 U. S. 386;
United States v.
Palmer, 3 Wheat, 610,
16 U. S. 631;
Beard v.
Rowan, 9 Pet. 301,
34 U. S. 317;
Holy Trinity Church v. United States, 143 U.
S. 457,
143 U. S. 462;
Coosaw Mining Co. v. South Carolina, 144 U.
S. 550. In
Emerson's case, the decision was
placed partly on the ground that the title of the act of 1831
indicated that Congress, in using the words "legal representatives"
in the body of the act, had in mind the heirs of Emerson and
Lorrain, and not technically their personal representatives. It is
a fact not without significance
Page 173 U. S. 428
that the money awarded by the above act of 1831 did not replace
any moneys taken by Emerson and Lorrain from their respective
estates for the benefit of the government. They had only rendered
meritorious personal services for the public, upon which no claim
of creditors could be based, but which services Congress chose to
recognize by making a gift to the heirs. This was substantially the
view taken of the case of
Emerson v. Hall in the recent
case of
Blagge v. Balch, 162 U. S. 439,
162 U. S.
458.
The case before us differs from the
Emerson case by
reason of circumstances which we must suppose were not overlooked
by Congress when it passed the act of 1891. By advancing to Van
Nostrand $75,000 to be used for the government, Price's ability to
meet his obligations to creditors was to that extent diminished. As
he had acted in good faith and in the belief that he was promoting
the best interests of the government, the purpose of Congress was
to make him whole in respect of the amount he had in good faith
advanced to his successor for public use. He was then alive, and
there was no occasion for Congress to think of making any provision
for those who might be his heirs. We think that the legislation in
question had reference to his financial condition, and there is no
reason to suppose that Congress intended that the amount, if any,
found due him upon the adjustment of his accounts should not
constitute a part of his absolute personal estate, to be received
and applied in the event of his death by his personal
representative, as required by law.
We concur with the state court in the view that the act of 1891
was not intended to confer a mere gratuity upon Price, but was a
recognition of a moral and equitable, if not legal, obligation upon
the part of the government to restore to him moneys advanced in the
belief at the time that they would be repaid to him in the
settlement of his accounts as a disbursing officer, and that the
use of the words "or his heirs" in the act was not to make a gift
to the heirs of such sum as upon the required adjustment of his
accounts was found to be due their ancestor, and thereby exclude
his creditors from
Page 173 U. S. 429
all interest in that sum, but to provide against the contingency
of death's occurring before the adjustment was consummated, and
thus to make it certain that the right to have his accounts
credited with the amount paid to Van Nostrand upon principles of
"equity and justice" should not be lost by reason of such death.
Under this interpretation of the act, the words "or his heirs" must
be held to mean the same thing as personal representatives. We do
not perceive either in the words of the act or in the circumstances
attending its passage anything to justify the belief that Congress
had any purpose, in the event of the death of Price, to defeat the
just demands of creditors.
Reference was made in argument to the recent case of
Briggs
v. Walker, 171 U. S. 466,
171 U. S.
473-474. It differs in some respects from both the
Emerson case and the present case, but the decision is in
accord with the views herein expressed. It arose under "An act for
the relief of the estate of C. M. Briggs, deceased," and the
principal question was whether the right given by the act to
Briggs' "legal representatives" was for the benefit of his next of
kin to the exclusion of his creditors. This Court said:
"The act of Congress nowhere mentions heirs at law or next of
kin. Its manifest purpose is not to confer a bounty or gratuity
upon anyone, but to provide for the ascertainment and payment of a
debt due from the United States to a loyal citizen for property of
his taken by the United States, and to enable his executor to
recover, as part of his estate, proceeds received by the United
States from the sale of that property. The act is 'for the relief
of the estate' of Charles M. Briggs, and the only matter referred
to the Court of Claims is the claim of his 'legal representatives.'
The executor was the proper person to represent the estate of
Briggs, and was his legal representative, and as such, he brought
suit in the Court of Claims and recovered the fund now in question,
and consequently held it as assets of the estate, and subject to
the debts and liabilities of his testator to the defendants in
error."
It is to be observed that the court in that case looked both to
the body of the act and the preamble in order to ascertain the
intention of Congress.
Page 173 U. S. 430
It results that the plaintiffs in error, as heirs of Rodman M.
Price, were not denied by the final judgment of the state court any
right secured to them by the act of 1891.
Something was said in argument which implied that Price had
wrongly resisted the collection of the Forrest claim and judgment.
It is proper to say that, so far as the record speaks on that
subject, the course of the deceased was induced by the belief on
his part that it was a claim which he was not bound in law or
justice to pay. Our conclusion does not rest in any degree upon the
character of that claim, but entirely upon questions of law arising
out of matters that were concluded, so far as this Court is
concerned, by the action of the state court, and which we have no
jurisdiction to review.
We find in the record no error of law in respect of the federal
questions presented for consideration, and therefore the decree
below must be
Affirmed.