Under §§ 1098 and 1261, Rev.Stat., and the opening
clause of the Navy Personnel Act of March 13, 1899, 30 Stat. 1004,
a naval officer assigned to duty on the personal staff of an
admiral as flag lieutenant, without any other designation, is an
aide to such admiral, and entitled to the additional pay of $200
allowed to an aide of a major general in the Army.
41 Ct.Cl. 400 affirmed on this point.
Page 208 U. S. 33
Under § 1262 and the Act of June 30, 1882, 22 Stat. 118, an
aide to an admiral is not entitled to have his longevity pay
calculated upon the additional pay which he receive as aide, that
being under § 1261, Rev.Stat., an allowance in addition to,
and not a part of, the pay of his rank.
41 Ct.Cl. 400 reversed on this point.
The facts, which involve the construction of §§ 1098
and 1261 of the Revised Statutes, and the opening clause of the
Navy Personnel Act of March 13, 1899, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is an action in the Court of Claims, brought by
William G. Miller, a lieutenant in the Navy, and who served as flag
lieutenant on the personal staff of Rear Admiral Kautz from July 1,
1899, to March 2, 1900, for which period he claims that he is
entitled to recover pay at the additional rate of $200 a year as an
aide to the rear admiral, and, secondly, and additional sum for
longevity increase, based upon this additional allowance. The facts
were found by the Court of Claims and judgment rendered in favor of
the claimant upon both branches of his claim. 41 Ct.Cl. 400. From
this judgment, the United States appeals.
It is the contention of counsel for the appellee, claimant
below, that this case is ruled by the decision of this Court in
United States v. Crosley, 196 U.
S. 327, upon both branches.
From the findings of fact, it appears that the claimant was a
lieutenant in the Navy from July 1, 1899, to March 2, 1900, of more
than fifteen years' service. On October 15, 1898, he reported, by
order of the Secretary of the Navy, to Rear Admiral Kautz,
Commander in Chief of the Pacific Division,
Page 208 U. S. 34
for such duty as might be assigned him on the flagship. On that
day, he was assigned to duty on the personal staff of the Commander
in Chief as flag lieutenant, where he continued to serve until
March 2, 1900. During that time, the personal staff of Rear Admiral
Kautz consisted of two officers, one, the claimant, Miller,
designated as flag lieutenant, and the other, flag secretary or
clerk.
In the findings of fact, the duties of the officers constituting
the personal staff are set forth in a letter from the Secretary of
the Navy, which we shall have occasion to notice later.
The claim for additional pay as aide to Rear Admiral Kautz was
predicated upon §§ 1098 and 1261 of the Revised Statutes,
providing aides to major generals and fixing an allowance of $200 a
year in addition to the pay of the rank of such aide, and the
opening clause of the Navy Personnel Act of March 3, 1899, 30 Stat.
1004, c. 413,, giving to commissioned officers of the line of the
Navy and of the Medical and Pay Corps the same pay and allowances,
except forage, as are or may be provided for officers of
corresponding rank in the Army. These sections of the statutes were
considered in
United States v. Crosley, supra, and it was
held that the allowance of extra pay was due to the aide of the
rear admiral, corresponding to the extra pay allowed to the aide of
the major general in the Army. The difference in this respect
between the
Crosley case and the one now under
consideration is that the claimant in that case was designated as
an aide, while, in the present case, the claimant was assigned to
duty on the personal staff of the Commander in Chief as flag
lieutenant; it is therefore claimed that he is not entitled to the
extra compensation due only to an aide to the rear admiral. This
argument is predicated on §§ 343, 344, and 345 of the
regulations of the government of the Navy, 1896, which are as
follows:
"SEC. 343. The chief of staff, flag lieutenant, clerk, and aides
shall constitute the personal staff of a flag officer."
"SEC. 344. (1) A flag officer, when ordered to a command afloat,
may, at his discretion, nominate to the Secretary of the
Page 208 U. S. 35
Navy a line officer not above the rank of lieutenant to serve on
his staff as flag lieutenant, and a line officer not above the rank
of lieutenant, junior grade, to serve as clerk."
"(2) The flag lieutenant, in addition to his other duties, shall
be the fleet signal officer."
"SEC. 345. (1) A flag officer may select any officer of his
command to serve as flag lieutenant or clerk, provided his grade
accords with the rules laid down in article 344."
"(2) He may also, when necessary, select other line officers
junior to the flag lieutenant to serve on his personal staff as
aides, but shall not assign naval cadets to such duty."
Regulations for the Government of the Navy of the United States,
1896-97.
It is the contention of the counsel for the government that this
language clearly indicates that a flag lieutenant on the staff of a
rear admiral, designated in paragraph 1, § 345, is to be
distinguished from aides junior to the flag lieutenant designated
in paragraph 2 of the section. But we think it would be giving a
too narrow interpretation of the purpose of Congress to give naval
officers the same pay as officers of corresponding rank in the
Army, to construe this regulation to deny such pay to a flag
lieutenant because he may not have been technically designated as
an aide. And, taking the regulation literally, it does not
necessarily follow that, because the rear admiral may select a
junior to the flag lieutenant to serve on his personal staff as
aide, that the one designated as flag lieutenant or clerk might not
also be regarded as an aide. Be this as it may, we think the
statute should be construed so as to effect the purpose of
Congress, and that a determination of who are aides should be
arrived at by a consideration of the nature and character of the
duties of the officers constituting the personal staff of a flag
officer. Referring to the letter of the Secretary of the Navy,
embodied in the finding of facts, we find:
"As in the case of a general officer of the Army, these
officers, including the flag lieutenant, are, in every acceptation
of the
Page 208 U. S. 36
word, aides for assisting the Commander in Chief in the
performance of his duties. The number of officers thus assigned is
limited only by the actual necessities of the case. In very large
fleets, where the staff work is especially heavy, two or three
so-called aides may be necessary in addition to the flag lieutenant
and the secretary. They are all, from flag lieutenant to the lowest
aide in point of rank, aides in every sense of the term to the flag
officer. The senior aide of the flag officer is, in ninety-nine
cases out of a hundred, chosen by the flag officer personally as a
flag lieutenant. The term 'flag lieutenant,' in itself, by no means
indicates all the duties which the officer so appointed performs.
Different flag officers distribute their duties among the members
of the personal staff in different ways. Some have charge of one
thing, or set of things, another has charge of other things; but,
from time immemorial, in other naval services as well as our own,
it has been customary to term the senior aide of the flag officer
the 'flag lieutenant,' because, from time immemorial also, that
aide has been placed in charge, as one of his duties only, of the
signal work of the fleet or squadron in which he may happen to be
serving."
"
* * * *"
"It will be seen from this that the flag lieutenant is in every
respect the aide, peculiarly, of the flag officer, and his duties,
in comparison with those of an aide to a general officer, more
nearly conform to those performed by a military aide than do those
of any other officer on the personal staff of a flag officer."
In view of the character of the duties thus required of a flag
lieutenant, who is to all intents an aide to the rear admiral, we
are of opinion that the Court of Claims did not err in its decision
on this branch of the case, that the claimant was entitled to the
increased pay awarded to the aide of a major general at the rate of
$200 a year.
As to the contention that longevity pay should be computed on
the whole amount of the claimant's pay, including this allowance as
aide, we think the Court of Claims was in error. Indeed, there is a
strong indication in the opinion of the learned
Page 208 U. S. 37
judge delivering the opinion in that court that this allowance
would not have been made but for the supposed ruling in
United
States v. Crosley, supra. It is true that, in
Crosley's case, the longevity pay, as computed, was based
upon the $200 additional allowance on account of services as aide,
but the correctness of this method of computation was not disputed.
Two questions were made in that case: first, as to the right of the
claimant to the extra $200 allowed to the aide of a major general
in the Army; second, as to whether he was entitled to "mounted pay"
allowance to major generals' aides. Upon well settled principles,
the case could not be authority for a point neither made, nor
discussed, nor directly decided, and only incidentally involved
therein.
Considering the question as one of first impression, we think
the statute makes it perfectly plain that longevity pay is not to
be based upon the increased allowance to an aide. The Revised
Statutes, § 1262, provides:
"There shall be allowed and paid to each commissioned officer
below the rank of brigadier general, including chaplains and others
having assimilated rank or pay, ten percentum of their current
yearly pay for each term of five years of service."
In the case of
United States v. Tyler, 105 U.
S. 244, this Court held that current yearly pay upon
which longevity increase was to be computed should include previous
longevity increases, and in
United States v. Mills,
197 U. S. 223, it
was held that the ten percent increase upon "pay proper" of the
compensation of officers serving beyond the continental limits
should be computed upon the total amount which the officer was
entitled to receive at the time of such service, both for longevity
pay and the pay provided by § 1261 of the Revised Statutes.
But we have to deal in this case with the statute of June 30, 1882,
22 Stat. 118, c. 254, which provides:
"That from and after the first day of July, eighteen hundred and
eighty-two, the ten percentum increase for length of service
allowed to certain officers by section twelve hundred
Page 208 U. S. 38
and sixty-two of the Revised Statutes shall be computed on the
yearly pay of the grade fixed by sections twelve hundred and
sixty-one and twelve hundred and seventy-four of the Revised
Statutes."
This statute was doubtless passed to prevent the computation of
longevity pay by compounding previous pay for that purpose, which
had the effect to give the increase on the pay of the grade, and
also on the previous longevity increase. This amendatory act
distinctly limits the computation of increase pay for length of
service to yearly pay of the grade or rank of the officer entitled
thereto. The allowance of $200 a year under § 1261, Revised
Statutes, in "addition to the pay of his rank," is manifestly not
the yearly pay of the grade. The purpose of the additional
allowance is to compensate the officer during the time he is
designated for a special service as aide. His longevity pay is to
be computed on the yearly pay affixed by law to the grade or rank
to which the officer belongs.
The judgment of the Court of Claims, based upon computation of
longevity pay upon the additional allowance for pay as aide, cannot
be sustained in view of the statutory provision, and, to that
extent, the judgment of the Court of Claims must be modified, and,
as so modified
Affirmed.