The word "waters and shores " of a river as used in §§
2550, 2551, Rev.Stat., are broad enough to include the whole of a
city on those shores and within the limits named. The Collection
District of Georgetown includes the whole of the City of
Washington, D.C., and the Secretary of the Treasury has no power,
general or statutory, under §§ 3657, 3658, Rev.Stat., to
appoint, and allow compensation to, a disbursing agent for funds
appropriated for building a post office in Washington.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 197 U. S. 232
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims
rejecting the claim of the appellant. 39 Ct. Cl. 338. The claimant,
while a disbursing clerk of the Treasury Department, received a
letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, as follows:
"George A. Bartlett, disbursing clerk, Treasury Department,
Washington, D.C."
"Sir: You are hereby appointed disbursing agent for such funds
as may be advanced to you from time to time on account of the
appropriation for post office, Washington, D.C. You will be
entitled to such compensation for the services named as is provided
by law, and the same rate of compensation will be allowed on all
amounts disbursed by you since October 15, 1891, on account of the
appropriation named."
Directions followed.
The claimant gave no new bond and took no additional oath of
office. He proceeded to disburse nearly two and a half millions of
dollars, and claims three-eighths of one percent upon the sum
disbursed.
The claimant puts his right to compensation on two grounds: the
general powers of the Secretary of the Treasury, apart from
statute, and Rev.Stat. § 3658. As to the former, it is enough
to say that whatever power the Secretary might have in the absence
of legislation, Congress has dealt with the subject so fully that
it is plain that we must look to the statutes alone. Rev.Stat.
§§ 1760-1765, 3657, 3658, 255; Act of August 7, 1882.
Looking to the statutes, the claimant relies on Rev.Stat. §
3658:
"Where there is no collector at the place of location of any
public work specified in the preceding section [which section
specifies post offices], the Secretary of the Treasury may appoint
a disbursing agent
Page 197 U. S. 233
for the payment of all moneys appropriated for the construction
of any such public work, with such compensation as he may deem
equitable and just."
It is urged that there is no collector at Washington, the place
of location of the public work concerned.
The statutes as to the collector for Washington are as follows:
Rev.Stat. § 2550:
"There shall be, in the District of Columbia, one collection
district, as follows: the District of Georgetown, to comprise all
the waters and shores of the Potomac River within the State of
Maryland and the District of Columbia, from Pomonkey Creek to the
head of the navigable waters of that river, in which Georgetown
shall be the port of entry."
§ 2551. "There shall be in the district of Georgetown a
collector." It appears from § 2550 that the collection
district of Georgetown is more extensive than the City of
Georgetown. And this is not changed by the later statute making
Georgetown a part of Washington. Act of February 11, 1895, 28 Stat.
650, c. 79. We do not perceive on what ground it is denied that the
Washington post office is within this district. The words "shores
of the Potomac River" seem to us broad enough to include the whole
of a city on those shores and within the other limits named.
"Waters and shores" is the usual phrase in Rev.Stat. Title 34, c.
1, §§ 2517-2607. The words "in which" assume that
Georgetown is embraced within the district. If within the district,
it is so simply because it is on the shores, as that word is used
in § 2550; and if Georgetown is within it, Washington is in it
also, on the same ground. The same form of expression and the same
assumption constantly recur in other sections. To show still
further that collection districts run inland, and are not limited
to the mathematical line which bounds the water, it may be observed
that, while "waters and shores" is the most common expression, a
district frequently is declared to include towns --
e.g.,
§ 2517, Seventh, Thirteenth; § 2522; § 2531, First,
Second; § 2533, First. It may include lands, § 2519, or
embrace a county, § 2517, First, Sixth, or
Page 197 U. S. 234
even a state, § 2522. If Washington is within the
collection district, then there was a collector at the place of
location of the Washington post office,
see § 3657,
and the authority of the Secretary to appoint a disbursing agent
under § 3658 was excluded by its very words.
The claimant does not contend that his case gets any appreciable
help from the Act of August 7, 1882, 22 Stat. 306. That gives the
compensation allowed by law to collectors of customs to disbursing
agents appointed to disburse any appropriation for any United
States post office or other buildings "not located within the city
of Washington." No other statute is relied upon. No doubt the
Secretary was under the impression when the letter was written that
he was making an appointment which would entitle the claimant to
distinct compensation for new work and responsibility. He did not
regard the claimant as designated to be disbursing agent within the
claimant's district under Rev.Stat. § 255, and therefore as
not entitled to any additional pay. Rev.Stat. §§ 1764,
1765. But we do not see how the case can be put any higher. It is
agreed that the claimant was not appointed to a new office by the
Secretary's letter. Therefore, no help is to be got from
United
States v. Saunders, 120 U. S. 126,
129 U. S. 129.
The case is a hard one, but we are of opinion that the decision of
the Court of Claims was right.
Judgment affirmed.