In this case, it was rightly decided in the court below that in
determining, under the provisions of Rev.Stat. sec. 902, whether
the Spanish vessels sunk or destroyed at Manila were of inferior or
superior force to the American vessels engaged in that battle, the
land batteries, mines, and torpedoes not controlled by those in
charge of the Spanish vessels, but which supported those vessels,
were to be excluded altogether from consideration, and that the
size and armaments of the vessels sunk or destroyed, together with
the number of men upon them, were alone to be regarded in
determining the amount of the bounty to be awarded.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 178 U. S. 511
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action in the Court of Claims to recover bounty
money earned by the plaintiff in error as the commanding officer of
the American fleet at the naval battle of Manila, on the first day
of May, 1898.
The statute under which the action was brought is as
follows:
"Rev.Stat. § 4635. A bounty shall be paid by the United
States for each person on board any ship or vessel of war belonging
to an enemy at the commencement of an engagement which is sunk or
otherwise destroyed in such engagement by any ship or vessel
belonging to the United States, or which it may be necessary to
destroy in consequence of injuries sustained in action, of one
hundred dollars if the enemy's vessel was of inferior force, and of
two hundred dollars if of equal or superior force, to be divided
among the officers and crew in the same manner as prize money, and
when the actual number of men on board any such vessel cannot be
satisfactorily ascertained, it shall be estimated according to the
complement allowed to vessels of its class in the navy of the
United States, and there shall be paid as bounty to the captors of
any vessel of war captured from an enemy, which they may be
instructed to destroy, or which is immediately destroyed for the
public interest, but not in consequence of injuries received in
action, fifty dollars for every person who shall be on board at the
time of such capture."
The mode in which bounty money earned under that section was to
be divided is indicated by the following provisions relating to the
distribution of prize money:
"§ 4631. All prize money adjudged to the captors shall be
distributed in the following proportions:"
"First. To the commanding officer of a fleet or squadron, one
twentieth part of all prize money awarded to any vessel or vessels
under his immediate command. "
Page 178 U. S. 512
"Second. To the commanding officer of a division of a fleet or
squadron, on duty under the orders of the commander in chief of
such fleet or squadron, a sum equal to one fiftieth part of any
prize money awarded to a vessel of such division for a capture made
while under his command, such fiftieth part to be deducted from the
moiety due to the United States, if there be any such moiety,
otherwise from the amount awarded to the captors; but such fiftieth
part shall not be in addition to any share which may be due to the
commander of the division, and which he may elect to receive, as
commander of a single ship making or assisting in the capture."
"Third. To the fleet captain, one hundredth part of all prize
money awarded to any vessel or vessels of the fleet or squadron in
which he is serving, except in a case where the capture is made by
the vessel on board of which he is serving at the time of such
capture, and in such case he shall share, in proportion to his pay,
with the other officers and men on board such vessel."
"Fourth. To the commander of a single vessel, one tenth part of
all the prize money awarded to the vessel under his command, if
such vessel at the time of the capture was under the command of the
commanding officer of a fleet or squadron, or a division, and
three-twentieths if his vessel was acting independently of such
superior officer."
"Fifth. After the foregoing deductions, the residue shall be
distributed and proportioned among all others doing duty on board,
including the fleet captain, and borne upon the books of the ship
in proportion to their respective rates of pay in the service."
It may be here stated that the provisions for prize money and
bounty to the navy were repealed by an Act of Congress approved
March 3, 1899, which declares that
"all provisions of law authorizing the distribution among
captors of the whole or any portion of the proceeds of vessels, or
any property hereafter captured, condemned as prize, or providing
for the payment of bounty for the sinking or destruction of vessels
of the enemy hereafter occurring in time of war, are hereby
repealed."
30 Stat. 1004, 1007, c. 413, § 13.
Page 178 U. S. 513
The American vessels taking part in the battle were the
Olympia, Baltimore, Boston, Raleigh, Concord, Petrel,
McCulloch, Nanshan, and
Zafiro.
The number of officers and men on those vessels during the
battle was 1,836.
The Spanish vessels taking part in the battle were the
Regina Cristina, Castilla, Don Juan de Austria, Don Antonio de
Ulloa, General Lezo, Marquez del Duero, Argos, Velasco, Isla de
Mindanao, Isla de Cuba, Isla de Luzon, Manila, and two torpedo
boats. The
Regina Cristina, Castilla, Don Juan de Ulloa,
General Lezo, Marquez del Duero, Argos, Velasco, Isla de
Mindanao, and the two torpedo boats were destroyed by the
American vessels. The
Don Juan de Austria, Isla de Cuba,
and
Isla de Luzon were disabled and put out of action in
the battle, and were captured, but they were subsequently floated
and repaired by the United States, and now constitute a part of the
American navy. The
Manila was captured in the same
engagement.
No claim for bounty under section 4635 is made in the present
action on account of the sinking of the
Don Juan de Austria,
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla de Luzon because
proceedings are to be begun in the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia to condemn those vessels as prize of war, the claimant
reserving the right to make such claim hereafter if it should be
held that the vessels are not subject to condemnation in prize.
The total number of men on board the Spanish vessels during the
battle of Manila was 2,973. The total number on board the Spanish
vessels destroyed was, at the commencement of the action,
1,914.
The enemy's vessels were supported by land batteries and by
mines and torpedoes in the entrance to Manila Bay and in the bay
itself, and some of those in the bay exploded during the
action.
It was found as a fact by the Court of Claims -- and this Court
must assume it to be true -- that, taking into consideration the
guns at Corregidor, El Fraile, and other forts at the entrance of
the bay, and those at Manila and Cavite, and the torpedoes and
mines in the bay and the entrance to it, the enemy's force was
superior to the force of the vessels of the United
Page 178 U. S. 514
states, but that, excluding shore batteries and submarine
defenses, the American vessels and armaments were superior in force
to the Spanish vessels.
The court below -- all its members concurring -- was of opinion
that the land batteries, mines, and torpedoes that supported the
Spanish vessels during the naval engagement in Manila Bay should be
excluded from consideration, and that the claim of the plaintiff
came within the clause of the statute allowing the sum of one
hundred dollars for each person on board of the vessels sunk or
destroyed "if the enemy's vessel was of inferior force," and not
within the clause allowing the sum of two hundred dollars "if [the
enemy's vessel was] of equal or superior force." Judgment was
accordingly entered against the United States for the sum of
$9,570, upon the basis of one hundred dollars for each person on
board at the commencement of the engagement, of the enemy's vessels
sunk or destroyed.
The counsel have called our attention to several cases in this
and other courts. Do any of those cases constitute a direct
adjudication of the question now before us?
In
The Ironclad
Atlanta, 3 Wall. 425,
70 U. S. 432,
the question was whether a certain American vessel, the
Nahant, was to be regarded as one of the capturing vessels
in a naval engagement in Wassau Sound, Georgia, in 1863. The Court
said:
"The importance of the point is this: the
Weehawken was
confessedly inferior in force to the
Atlanta, and if she
is alone to be regarded in the comparison of forces, the whole
prize money goes to the captors. On the other hand, the combined
force of the two monitors was superior to that of the
Atlanta, and if both are to be regarded as capturing
vessels, only one-half of the prize money goes to the captors, and
the decree must be affirmed. The mere fact that the only shot fired
and the only damage done was by the
Weehawken is not
decisive. Other circumstances must be taken into account in
determining the matter, such as the force, position, conduct, and
intention of the
Nahant. The two vessels were known to be
under the same command and of nearly equal force. The
Atlanta descended the sound to attack both, and governed
herself with reference to their combined action. It is not
reasonable to suppose that
Page 178 U. S. 515
her course would have been the one pursued had she had only the
Weehawken to encounter. Besides, the fire of the
Atlanta was directed entirely to the
Nahant, and,
of course, diverted from her consort. It is possible that a
different result might have followed had the fire been turned upon
the
Weehawken. This diversion must be considered, in every
just sense of the terms, as giving aid to her. Again, the power of
the shot of the
Weehawken had evidently surprised the
officers of the
Atlanta, who found their vessel speedily
disabled and their crew demoralized. The advance upon her at full
speed of a second monitor of equal force, ready to inflict similar
injuries, may have hastened the surrender. It can hardly be
supposed that the approach of the second monitor did not enter into
the consideration of the captain and officers of the
Atlanta. If the shot from the guns of one of the monitors
could, in a few moments, penetrate the casement of the
Atlanta, crush in the bars of her pilot-house, and
prostrate between forty and fifty of her men, her captain might
well conclude that the combined fire of both would speedily sink
his vessel and destroy his entire crew. It cannot be affirmed, nor
is it reasonable to suppose, that any of the incidents of the
battle would have occurred as they did if the
Nahant had
not been present in the action."
Another case referred to is that of
The
Siren, 13 Wall. 389,
80 U. S. 395.
That was a case in prize arising out of certain captures near
Charleston, South Carolina, in 1865, of rebel vessels during the
late Civil War as the result of the joint action of the land and
naval forces of the United States. This Court, affirming the
judgment of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts,
held that Congress had made no provision in reference to joint
captures by the army and navy, and that such captures inured
exclusively to the benefit of the United States. The Court
said:
"We have already adverted to the ingress of the navy into the
harbor of Charleston on the morning of the 17th of February. At 9
o'clock that morning, an officer of the land forces hoisted the
national flag over the ruins of Fort Sumter. Flags were also raised
over Forts Ripley and Pinckney. At 10 o'clock, a military officer
reached Charleston. The mayor surrendered the city to him. Four
hundred and
Page 178 U. S. 516
fifty pieces of artillery, military stores, and much other
property were captured with it. Contemporaneously with these things
was the seizure of the
Siren by the
Gladiolus,
and the approach and arrival of the rest of the fleet. The two
forces were acting under the orders of a common government, for a
common object, and for none other. They were united in their labors
and their perils, and in their triumph they were not divided. They
were converging streams toiling against the same dike. When it gave
way, both swept in without any further obstruction. The
consummation of their work was the fall of the city. Either force,
after the abandonment of their defenses by the rebels, could have
seized all that was taken by both. The meritorious service of the
Gladiolus was as a salvor, and not as a captor. Precedence
in the time of the arrival of the respective forces is an element
of no consequence. Upon principle, reason, and authority, we think
the judgment of the district court was correctly given."
The case chiefly relied upon by the plaintiff is
United States v.
Farragut, 22 Wall. 406. The question now presented
might perhaps have been determined under the pleadings in that case
if it had not been withdrawn from consideration before this Court
rendered its judgment. Admiral Farragut and others of the American
navy filed a libel in admiralty in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia on account of certain prizes taken below New
Orleans in April, 1862. The plaintiff and the government referred
the cause to the determination and award of certain persons, whose
award was to be final upon all questions of law and facts involved
-- the award to be entered as a rule and decree of court in the
case, with the right also of either party to appeal to this Court
as from other decrees or judgments in prize cases. The arbitrators
made an award, holding, among other things, that certain captures
were not a conjoint operation of the army and navy of the United
States. Exceptions were filed to the award as erroneous in point
both of law and fact. The exceptions were overruled, and a decree
was entered for the claimants. After the case came to this Court,
the Attorney General, according to the report of the case,
dismissed the appeal as to certain property covering $613,520 of
the aggregate
Page 178 U. S. 517
sum allowed by the decree, and that sum was distributed among
the captors. That part of the case, it is stated, raised the very
question now presented, and it is contended that the action of the
Attorney General should be regarded as indicating the
interpretation placed upon the statute by the executive department.
We cannot accept this view. It does not appear from the report of
the case what reasons induced the Attorney General to dismiss the
appeal of the government as to the matters referred to. It may have
been because of the conviction that, under the facts disclosed by
the record, the capture in question was not the result of the
conjoint action of the army and navy, but of the action alone of
the navy. It is sufficient to say that this Court regarded the
statement by the arbitrators that the capture was not the joint act
of the army and navy as binding upon it, and what appears in the
opinion about other points has no bearing upon the present
case.
Another case referred to by counsel is
Porter v. United
States, 106 U. S. 607,
106 U. S. 611.
But the decision there did not go beyond the point that the Act of
June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 306, 311, c. 174, did not allow bounty
where the vessels of the enemy during the late Rebellion, were
destroyed by the combined action of the land and naval forces of
the United States. The Court said:
"Prize money, or bounty in lieu of it, is not allowed by the
laws of Congress where vessels of the enemy are captured or
destroyed by the navy with the cooperation of the army. To win
either, the navy must achieve its success without the direct aid of
the army, by maritime force only. No pecuniary reward is conferred
for anything taken or destroyed by the navy when it acts in
conjunction with the army in the capture of a fortified position of
the enemy, though the meritorious services and gallant conduct of
its officers and men may justly entitle them to honorable mention
in the history of the country."
Nor has
The Selma, 1 Lowell 30, any bearing upon the
present discussion. That case arose out of certain captures made in
the action of August 5, 1864, in the Bay of Mobile. It was there
decided -- and nothing else was decided -- that, in order to
entitle a vessel to participate in the distribution of a
Page 178 U. S. 518
prize, its situation during the naval engagement must have been
such that it could have rendered assistance in the actual conflict
in which the prize was taken. The court said:
"Suppose it had happened in the case now before me, as once
occurred on the Mississippi under the same great captain, that only
a small number of vessels had made good the passage of the forts,
and that they had found themselves only equal or inferior in force
to the enemy within, and had then succeeded by their skill and
gallantry in making this capture. It would be impossible, I think,
under the case of
The Atlanta, or on principle, to hold
that the vessels outside were actual takers, and to reduce the
credit and reward of the conquerors to the level of a capture by
superior force. And it will not be easy under our law to define
actual captors in such a way as not to require of them at least the
qualifications of position and power to do service which the
statute peremptorily imposes on constructive takers."
We have referred quite fully to these cases because they were
made the subject of comment by counsel. But we do not think that
any of them meets the precise question now presented. They throw no
light on the inquiry whether, in estimating the force of the
enemy's vessel, the support furnished by land batteries, mines, and
torpedoes is to be taken into consideration.
The words in the existing statute relating to the distribution
of prize money are not entirely new. In the Act of March 2, 1799, 1
Stat. 709, 715, c. 24, § 5, relating to the navy of the United
States, it was provided
"that all captured national ships or vessels of war shall be the
property of the United States; all other ships or vessels, being of
superior force to the vessel making the capture, in men or in guns,
shall be the sole property of the captors, and all ships or vessels
of inferior force shall be divided equally between the United
States and the officers and men of the vessel making the
capture."
In the Act of April 23, 1800, 2 Stat. 45, 53, c. 33, § 7,
for the better government of the navy, it was provided
"that a bounty shall be paid by the United States of twenty
dollars for each person on board any ship of an enemy at the
commencement of an engagement which shall be sunk or destroyed
by
Page 178 U. S. 519
any ship or vessel belonging to the United States of equal or
inferior force, the same to be divided among the officers and crew
in the same manner as prize money."
The fourth section of the act for the better government of the
navy, approved July 17, 1862, 12 Stat. 600, 606, c. 204, § 4,
contained this provision:
"That a bounty shall be paid by the United States for each
person on board any ship or vessel of war belonging to an enemy at
the commencement of an engagement which shall be sunk or otherwise
destroyed in such engagement by any ship or vessel belonging to the
United States, or which it may be necessary to destroy in
consequence of injuries sustained in action, of one hundred dollars
if the enemy's vessel was of inferior force, and of two hundred
dollars if of equal or superior force; to be divided among the
officers and crew in the same manner as prize money, and when the
actual number of men on board any such vessel cannot be
satisfactorily ascertained, it shall be estimated according to the
complement allowed to vessels of their class in the navy of the
United States, and there shall be paid as bounty to the captors of
any vessel of war captured from an enemy, which they may be
instructed to destroy, or which shall be immediately destroyed for
the public interest, but not in consequence of injuries received in
action, fifty dollars for every person who shall be on board at the
time of such capture."
Then came the Act of June 30, 1864, 18 Stat. 306, 310, c. 174,
§ 11, regulating prize proceedings and the distribution of
prize money. The eleventh section of that act is substantially the
same as the fourth section of the act of 1862, and is reproduced in
§ 4635 of the Revised Statutes, on which the claimant bases
his action against the United States.
It thus appears that Congress, in providing for bounty to be
paid by the United States on account of enemy vessels sunk or
otherwise destroyed by any ship or vessel belonging to the United
States, has never prescribed any other rule than to give the
smaller amount when the enemy's
vessel was of inferior
force, and the larger amount when the enemy's
vessel was
of equal or superior force. We are asked to construe the words in
the present statute "one hundred dollars if the enemy's
Page 178 U. S. 520
vessel was of inferior force, and of two hundred
dollars if of equal or superior force," to mean just what it would
mean if the question of the inferiority or superiority of the
enemy's vessel was made, by express words, to depend upon the
inquiry whether it was or was not supported in the naval engagement
by land batteries, mines, and torpedoes under the charge of others
than those having the management of the enemy's vessel. We cannot
do that without going far beyond the obvious import of the words
employed by Congress. Of course our duty is to give effect to the
will of Congress touching this matter. But we must ascertain that
will from the words Congress has chosen to employ, interpreting
such words according to their ordinary meaning, as well as in the
light of all the circumstances that may fairly be regarded as
having been within the knowledge of the legislative branch of the
government at the time it acted on the subject. There is
undoubtedly force in the suggestion that, in rewarding officers and
sailors who have sunk or destroyed the enemy's vessels in a naval
engagement, it is not unreasonable that all the difficulties of
every kind with which they were actually confronted when engaging
the enemy should be taken into consideration. But that was a matter
which we cannot suppose was overlooked by Congress, and we are not
at liberty to hold that it proceeded upon the broad basis suggested
when it expressly declared that the amount of its bounty shall
depend upon the question whether "the enemy's
vessel" --
not the enemy's vessel
and the land batteries, mines, and
torpedoes by which it was supported -- was of inferior or of equal
or superior force.
In our examination of this case, we have not forgotten the skill
and heroism displayed by the distinguished commander of our fleet
in the battle of Manila, as well as by officers and sailors acting
under his orders. All genuine Americans recall with delight and
pride the marvelous achievements of our navy in that memorable
engagement. But this Court cannot permit considerations of that
character to control its determination of a judicial question or
induce it to depart from the established rules for the
interpretation of statutes. Nor can we allow our judgment to be
influenced by the circumstance that Congress
Page 178 U. S. 521
has recently repealed all statutes giving bounty to officers and
soldiers of the navy for the sinking or destruction hereafter, in
time of war, of an enemy's vessels -- thereby, it may be assumed,
indicating that, in the judgment of the legislative branch of the
government, the policy of giving bounties to the navy was not
founded in wisdom, and should be abandoned. This Court has nothing
to do with questions of mere policy that may be supposed to
underlie the action of Congress. What is termed the policy of the
government in reference to any particular subject of legislation,
this Court has said,
"is generally a very uncertain thing, upon which all sorts of
opinions, each variant from the other, may be formed by different
persons. It is a ground much too unstable upon which to rest the
judgment of the Court in the interpretation of statutes."
Hadden v. The
Collector, 5 Wall. 107,
72 U. S. 111.
Our province is to declare what the law is, and not, under the
guise of interpretation or under the influence of what may be
surmised to be the policy of the government, so to depart from
sound rules of construction as in effect to adjudge that to be law
which Congress has not enacted as such. Here, the language used by
Congress is unambiguous. It is so clear that the mind at once
recognizes the intent of Congress. Interpreted according to the
natural import of the words used, the statute involves no absurdity
or contradiction, and there is consequently no room for
construction. Our duty is to give effect to the will of Congress as
thus plainly expressed.
United States v.
Fisher, 2 Cranch 358,
6 U. S. 399;
Lake County v. Rollins, 130 U. S. 662,
130 U. S.
670.
In our opinion, the Court of Claims did not err in holding that,
in determining whether the Spanish vessels sunk or destroyed at
Manila were of inferior or superior force to the American vessels
engaged in that battle, the land batteries, mines, and torpedoes
not controlled by those in charge of the Spanish vessels, but which
supported those vessels, were to be excluded altogether from
consideration, and that the size and armaments of the vessels sunk
or destroyed, together with the number of men upon them, were alone
to be regarded in determining the amount of the bounty to be
awarded. In that view, the decree below was right, and it is
Affirmed.
Page 178 U. S. 522
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, dissenting:
Claimant in prosecuting this case, in effect represents the
claims of all the officers and men engaged in the battle of Manila
Bay, May 1, 1898. The question is not whether there was a grant of
bounty, for that is not disputed. It is simply as to the amount of
bounty, and the correct result turns upon the construction of the
statute. There being no controversy in respect of the existence of
the grant, I am of opinion that the rule of strict construction
does not apply, and that the statute, in view of its object, should
be construed liberally in favor of the beneficiaries. If so
construed, the judgment ought to be reversed.
The applicable statutory provision is as follows:
"A bounty shall be paid by the United States for each person on
board any ship or vessel of war belonging to an enemy at the
commencement of an engagement which shall be sunk or otherwise
destroyed in such engagement by any ship or vessel belonging to the
United States, or which it may be necessary to destroy in
consequence of injuries sustained in action, of one hundred dollars
if the enemy's vessel was of inferior force, and of two hundred
dollars if of equal or superior force, to be divided among the
officers and crew in the same manner as prize money. . . ."
The obvious object of the law was to encourage personal
gallantry and enterprise. If the hostile force was equal or
superior, then the bounty was to be double what it would be if the
enemy's force was inferior, because the hazards to be run were so
much the greater. But the bounty was limited in total amount by the
number of persons on board the vessels of the enemy, which appears
to have been considered to be a practicable restriction.
The chief distinction, as a military achievement, of the victory
of Manila Bay is that the American fleet, unaided by an army,
attacked a force composed of ships supported by powerful shore
defenses, together with submarine mines and torpedoes, and, in
defiance of these open and hidden dangers in
Page 178 U. S. 523
addition to the power of the enemy's fleet, sailed in and not
only destroyed or captured all the opposing vessels, but captured
or silenced the shore batteries. To omit consideration of these
circumstances in determining pecuniary reward under the statute
seems to me to be altogether unreasonable, and yet it is held that,
in comparing the opposing forces, the shore batteries and submarine
mines and torpedoes which our fleet was compelled to encounter
should not be taken into account, though the bounty could not rise
above the number of persons on the enemy's ships.
It is my judgment that the intent plainly was that the entire
opposing forces should be compared, and that the shore batteries,
mines, and torpedoes protecting and defending the vessels of the
enemy should be included in estimating the rate of bounty, although
they were, of course, not armaments or means of attack or defense
directly located on the enemy vessels themselves. Indeed, the words
of the statute, if literally construed, might be limited to
engagements of single vessels on each side, yet as to this the
principal opinion correctly applies a liberal construction, and any
other would be preposterous. But if a liberal construction be
proper at all, why not altogether?
The action of the government in respect of the taking of vessels
by Admiral Farragut in the capture of New Orleans has great
significance. That case involved an award made by a distinguished
board of arbitrators, Henry W. Paine, of Massachusetts; Thomas J.
Durant, of the District of Columbia, and Gustavus v. Fox, then late
Assistant Secretary of the Navy, one of whose findings was:
"That in the engagement which resulted in the capture of those
ships, the entire force of the enemy was superior to the force of
the United States ships and vessels so engaged."
This finding was conceded to have included the forts and
batteries on shore, but that was not definitely stated. The
executive department acquiesced in the award of the arbitrators on
this branch of the case without demanding a more specific finding,
and this Court was not called upon to determine the precise
question. 22 Wall.
89 U. S. 406.
The Siren, 13
Wall. 389, is not to the contrary, inasmuch as that was a case of
joint capture by the army and the navy, and
Page 178 U. S. 524
Congress had made no grant in such circumstances. Here the
victory was that of the navy alone, and the pecuniary fruits under
this statute should not be diminished because the opposing force
was partly on shore or under water.
Undoubtedly it is our duty to give effect to the will of
Congress, but in ascertaining its will, the object Congress
manifestly sought to attain must be recognized, and should be
controlling, unless positively defeated by the language used.
I am unable to concur in the opinion and judgment of the Court,
and am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE
McKENNA concur in this dissent.