Under the Act of March 3, 1889, 30 Stat. 1228, the two months'
pay to which an officer of the Navy is entitled who was detached
from his vessel and ordered home to be honorably discharged after
creditable service during the war with Spain is to be computed at
the rate of pay he was receiving for sea service when detached, and
not at the rate of his pay for shore service when he was actually
discharged.
41 Ct.Cl. 256 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 204 U. S. 344
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a petition for the recovery of $116.66. The case having
been heard by the Court of Claims, that court, upon the evidence,
filed the following findings of fact and conclusion of law:
"
Findings of Fact"
"I. The claimant, John M. Hite, was appointed assistant engineer
in the United States Navy, with the relative rank of ensign, for
temporary service during the late war with Spain, on May 14, 1898;
he reported for duty on board the U.S.S. 'Massachusetts,' in
obedience to orders of the Navy Department, on June 1, 1898, and
served creditably as such officer on said ship until December 17,
1898, at which date he was detached and ordered to his home, and on
December 22, 1898, was honorably discharged from the naval service.
"
Page 204 U. S. 345
"The order referred to is in the words following:"
" Navy Department"
" Washington, D.C. Dec. 12, 1898"
" Sir: --"
" You are hereby detached from duty on board the U.S.S.
'Massachusetts,' and will proceed to your home."
" Immediately upon your arrival, report your local address in
full to the Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, Washington, D.C.
See article 224, U.S. Navy Regulations, 1896."
" Report also the date of your detachment, and inform the
Department of the status of your accounts, and whether you are
indebted to the government by reason of advances drawn by you."
" Respectfully,"
" John D. Long, Secretary."
"Assistant Engineer John M. Hite, U.S. N."
" U.S.S. Massachusetts"
"II. The U.S.S. 'Massachusetts' was in commission and cruised
beyond the limits of the United States (in Cuban waters) during the
time of the claimant's service on board."
"III. In settlement of claimant's claim for extra pay authorized
by the Act of March 3, 1899, he was allowed by the accounting
officers of the Treasury Department two months' pay at the rate of
pay of an assistant engineer in the Navy on waiting orders only,
to-wit, $166.66."
"If entitled to two months' pay upon the basis of sea service
the difference is $116.66."
"
Conclusion of Law"
"Upon the foregoing findings of fact, the court decides, as a
conclusion of law, that the claimant is entitled to judgment in the
sum of one hundred and sixteen dollars and sixty-six cents
($116.66)."
The case is reported 41 Ct.Cl. 256.
The Act of March 3, 1899 (30 Stat. 1228, c. 427), among other
things, provides:
Page 204 U. S. 346
"The officers and enlisted men comprising the temporary force of
the Navy during the war with Spain, who served creditably beyond
the limits of the United States and who have been or may hereafter
be discharged, shall be paid two months' extra pay, and all such
officers and enlisted men of the Navy who have so served within the
limits of the United States, and who have been or may hereafter be
discharged, shall be paid one month's extra pay."
Appellee's counsel say that the issue is correctly stated by
counsel for the United States as follows:
"The claimant contends that the two months' extra pay provided
for in the foregoing statute should be at the rate of pay he
received while
doing sea service, to-wit, $1,700 per
year."
"The contention of the government is that, under the ruling of
this Court in
United States v. North, 112 U. S.
510, the claimant has been paid all that was due him,
inasmuch as he was paid two months' extra pay provided for in the
statute at the rate of pay he was receiving
at the time of his
discharge -- to-wit, at the rate of $1,000 per annum."
Appellee was appointed an officer in the Navy, May 14, 1898, by
authority of the Act of Congress of May 4 of that year (30 Stat.
369, c. 234), which provided:
"Whenever, within the next twelve months, an exigency may exist
which, in the judgment of the President, renders their services
necessary, he is hereby authorized to appoint from civil life and
commission such officers of the line and staff, not above the rank
or relative rank of commander, and warrant officers including
warrant machinists, and such officers of the Marine Corps not above
the rank of captain, to be appointed from the noncommissioned
officers of the corps and from civil life, as may be requisite:
Provided, That such officers shall serve only during the
continuance of the exigency under which their services are required
in the existing war."
The war with Spain began April 21, 1898, and the treaty
Page 204 U. S. 347
of Paris was signed December 10, 1898. Appellee served until
December 17, 1898 at which time he was detached from the vessel on
which he was serving and ordered home, where, on December 22, he
was honorably discharged from the naval service. It seems to have
been thought reasonable that the government should pay the expenses
of the journey home and for the time in getting there.
The Act of March 3, 1899, provided for extra pay for active
service. Hite was detached because it became the Department's duty
to discharge him under the proviso of the act of 1898, and the
detachment was manifestly preliminary to his discharge. The order
detaching him did not prescribe that, on arrival home he was to
hold himself "on waiting orders" or for further assignment to duty.
On the other hand, it required him to inform the Department of the
status of his accounts, obviously in order that they might be
settled on his leaving the service.
The two months' extra pay is given, as Chief Justice Peele,
delivering the opinion of the Court of Claims, says,
"because of creditable service beyond the limits of the United
States during the war with Spain, and therefore, upon discharge,
such officers become entitled to the same pay they were receiving
while so serving beyond the limits of the United States. . . . To
hold, because the claimant war ordered to his home, where he was
discharged five days later, instead of being discharged on the day
he was detached, that therefore he is entitled only to the lesser
pay, would be a construction too narrow to harmonize with the
purpose of Congress as disclosed by the act."
Notwithstanding the considered dissenting opinion in the court
below, we agree with the conclusion that, his engagement having
ended, and he having been discharged, the two months' extra pay
should have been given him upon the basis of the pay he was
receiving when detached.
The contention of the government is that this case is governed
by the ruling in
United States v. North, 112 U.
S. 510. In that case, it was held that officers of the
Navy and of the
Page 204 U. S. 348
regular Army who were employed in the prosecution of the war
with Mexico were entitled to the three months' extra pay provided
for by the Act of Congress of July 19, 1848, c. 104, § 5, 9
Stat. 248, and the act of February 19, 1879, c. 90, 20 Stat.
316.
The act of 1848 provided:
"That the officers, etc., engaged, etc., in the war with Mexico,
and who served out the term of their engagement, or have been or
may be honorably discharged, . . . shall be entitled to receive
three months' extra pay."
North was an officer in the Navy of the United States from May
29, 1829, to January 14, 1861, when he resigned. He served in the
war with Mexico as lieutenant, on board the frigate
Potomac, from February 10, 1846, until July, 1847, when
his vessel sailed for the United States. And Chief Justice Waite
said:
"Those of the regular Army or Navy who were 'engaged in the
military service of the United States in the war with Mexico' may
be said to 'have served out the term of their engagement,' or to
have been 'honorably discharged,' within the meaning of those terms
as used in the act of 1848, when the war was over, or when they
were ordered or mustered out of that service. Being in the Army and
Navy, their 'engagement' was to serve wherever they were ordered
for duty. Their engagement to serve in the war with Mexico ended
when they were taken away from that service by proper
authority."
"The pay they were to receive was evidently that which they were
receiving at the end of their engagement, or when they were
honorably discharged. The language is, 'shall be entitled to
receive three months' extra pay,' evidently meaning the same pay
they would have received if they had remained in the same service
three months longer. It follows that, as North was serving at sea
when he was ordered away, he was entitled to three months' sea
pay."
In the present case, appellee was taken away from the
service
Page 204 U. S. 349
when he was detached from his vessel, as he was appointed to
serve "only during the continuance of the exigency under which
their services were required in the existing war," and was
entitled, in the circumstances of the case, to extra pay on the
basis of that which he was receiving when detached, as we have said
above.
Emory's case was also considered by the court in the
same opinion and the same conclusion reached, and reference was
there made to that case as reported in 19 Ct.Cl. 254.
The judgment of the Court of Claims was right, and it is
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY took no part in the disposition of this
case.