The proviso in the back pay and bounty provision in the Sundry
Civil Appropriation Act of March 4, 1907, c. 2918, 34 Stat. 1295,
1356, directing accounting officers to follow decisions of this
Court and of the Court of Claims without regard to former
settlements, did not confer a new cause of action upon the holders
of other claims against the United States which had been adversely
ruled upon theretofore and remove the bar of the statute of
limitations from such claims.
The back pay and bounty provision in the Sundry Civil
Appropriation Act of 1907 related to certain enumerated claims and
the proviso also related exclusively to those claims, and is not to
be regarded as independent legislation.
This Court will not construe a provision in an appropriation act
in regard to an enumerated class of claims as expressing the intent
of Congress to unsettle past administrative action as to all claims
against the government; such a radical intent would not be
expressed in an obscure and uncertain manner.
Even though it may have become a modern practice in Congress to
adopt independent legislation by attaching "riders" to
appropriation bills, the judiciary is not relieved from the old
duty of correctly interpreting the statute when enacted.
A claim of an officer of the United States for extra
per
diem rations under the Act of July 5, 1838, and which had been
disallowed in 1890 by the accounting officers, was not reinstated
by the proviso in the back pay and bounty provision of the Sundry
Civil Appropriation Act of March 4, 1907.
48 Ct.Cl. 408 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction of statutes regulating
pay and allowances of officers of the army of the United States,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 632
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
By the judgment appealed from, the court below dismissed the
petition in which recovery was sought by the appellant of a stated
sum charged to be due him because of the extra
per diem
ration for each five years' service allowed by the Act of July 5,
1838, § 15, 5 Stat. 258, c. 162, and the ten percentum
increase of yearly pay given for each term of five years' service
by Rev.Stat. § 1262. To develop the questions to be decided,
we chronologically arrange the facts alleged and somewhat
abbreviate their statement, omitting nothing, however, relevant to
the issues.
Stating the petitioner to be a brigadier general on the retired
list, the petition alleged the period of his military service from
1855, when he entered the Military Academy, up to and including
1899, when, as a brigadier general, he was placed upon the retired
list. The arms of the military establishment in which the services
of the petitioner were rendered during the period stated, as well
as the various grades through which, by promotion, he passed were
enumerated, the whole period embracing service in the regular Army
except a brief time between the first of October, 1864, and the
first day of August, 1865, when it was alleged he served as an
officer of the volunteer service. It was charged that:
"During the entire period of his service as second lieutenant,
first lieutenant, and captain aforesaid, the practice of the War
Department and of the accounting officers of the Treasury
Department was not to count service as a cadet in the United States
Military Academy in reckoning the term of five years of service for
purposes of the additional ration provided by the Act of July 5,
1838, or for longevity increase of pay under § 1262 of the
Revised Statutes. "
Page 231 U. S. 633
The following averments were then made:
"It was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on the
twenty-seventh day of October, 1884, in the case of
United
States v. Morton, 112th Volume of United States Reports, p.
112 U. S. 3, and on the eleventh
day of March, 1889, in the case of
United States v.
Watson, reported in the 130th Volume of United States Reports,
p.
130 U. S. 80, that officers of
the United States Army were entitled, in computing their rations
under said Act of July 5, 1838, and in computing their longevity
pay under § 1262 of the Revised Statutes, to be credited with
their service as cadets in the United States Military Academy."
"Notwithstanding said decisions of the Supreme Court of the
United States, the Second Comptroller of the Treasury, on June 20,
1890, decided that he would not allow any claim for additional
rations under § 15 of the Act of July 5, 1838, aforesaid, and
for increase of longevity pay under § 1262 of the Revised
Statutes on account of any service not theretofore admitted as
forming a proper subject of credit by the previous practice of the
Treasury Department as aforesaid."
Although the date when the claim was presented was not stated,
it was averred that,
"after the decisions of the Supreme Court aforesaid in the
Morton and
Watson cases, a claim was presented by
this claimant to the Second Auditor of the Treasury for additional
rations and longevity pay due under the acts aforesaid in
accordance with the decisions of the Supreme Court aforesaid, and
said claim was disallowed [on December 13, 1890] by the Second
Auditor in accordance with the decision of the Second Comptroller
of the Treasury of June 20, 1890, as hereinbefore set forth, and no
consideration was given by said Auditor to the interpretation of
said statutes made by the Supreme Court in said cases."
It was alleged that, on the fourth day of March, 1907, "a
provision of law was passed by Congress as a portion
Page 231 U. S. 634
of the Annual Sundry Civil Appropriation Act, 34 Stat. 1356,"
which provision was quoted in full in the petition. It was further
alleged:
"that, on the eighteenth day of May, 1908, the Comptroller of
the Treasury decided . . . that, in the future, the decisions of
the Supreme Court of the United States in the cases aforesaid would
be followed by the accounting officers of the Treasury in claims
for additional rations and longevity pay aforesaid, based upon
service as a cadet at the Military Academy of West Point, but it
was decided by said Comptroller in various cases that . . . the
accounting officers of the Treasury would not reopen any claim as
aforesaid in which a settlement or adjudication had once been made
by their predecessors."
Following the enactment by Congress of the provision above
referred to, it was averred:
"Your petitioner applied to the Auditor for the War Department
in July, 1909, for all arrears of pay then due on account of his
service aforesaid, particularly for additional rations and
longevity pay on account of his service aforesaid as a cadet in the
Military Academy. The Auditor for the War Department refused to
consider said claim because of the settlement aforesaid, dated
December 13, 1890, by the Second Auditor then in office,
disallowing said claim."
Referring to the provision in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act
of 1907, it was then alleged:
"Your petitioner respectfully represents that, by said provision
of statute, there was granted to your petitioner a right to be paid
additional rations under said Act of 1838, and additional longevity
pay under said § 1262 of the Revised Statutes, for the reason
that the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States and of
the Court of Claims of the United States, aforesaid, held that such
rations and longevity pay were due in a similar case, and such
decisions should have been followed by said
Page 231 U. S. 635
accounting officers notwithstanding the former settlement or
adjudication by one of their predecessors as aforesaid. The refusal
of the accounting officers of the Treasury aforesaid to state a
balance in favor of your petitioner on account of the former
settlement aforesaid deprived your petitioner of a right granted
under said act of Congress, for which there is no remedy except by
action in this Court."
Plainly, under this pleading the only ground upon which the
right to a recovery was based was the provision in the Sundry Civil
Appropriation Act which was counted upon as conferring a
substantive new and independent right. The text of the proviso upon
which the case depends is this:
"Back pay and bounty: for payment of amounts for arrears of pay
of two and three year volunteers, for bounty to volunteers and
their widows and legal heirs, for bounty under the Act of July
twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, and for amounts for
commutation of rations to prisoners of war in rebel states, and to
soldiers on furlough, that may be certified to be due by the
accounting officers of the Treasury during the fiscal year nineteen
hundred and eight, $200,000:
Provided, That in all cases
hereafter so certified, the said accounting officers shall, in
stating balances, follow the decisions of the United States Supreme
Court or of the Court of Claims of the United States after the time
for appeal has expired, if no appeal be taken, without regard to
former settlements or adjudications by their predecessors."
The complaint that the court below held that this provision does
not "include the claim of the appellant" is the single matter
assigned as error, and what is urged to be the correct meaning of
the provision is thus stated in argument:
"1. That the above proviso in the Act of March 4, 1907, is an
acknowledgment of the indebtedness of the United States to all
persons whose claims are therein described
Page 231 U. S. 636
and, as a new promise, takes their claims out of the operation
of the statute of limitations."
"2. That, upon the refusal of the accounting officers to allow a
claim as directed by this proviso, an action may be maintained upon
the claim in the Court of Claims because it is a claim 'founded
upon . . . any law of Congress' (Judicial Code, Sec. 145, par.
first)."
It is apparent that the construction which the proposition
affixes to the proviso does not confine its operation to the
character of claims here involved, but extends it so as to embrace
all claims of every nature if hereafter it be asserted that a prior
administrative determination against the validity of the claim was
reached without following the decisions of this Court or of the
Court of Claims. The foundation principle contended for by which
the result just stated is brought about is that, by the effect of
the proviso, a new cause of action is conferred upon the holder of
every claim arising against the government from its foundation,
however remote may have been the time when an adverse ruling was
made and however otherwise statutes of limitation would be
applicable.
The arguments advanced to sustain the proposition make it clear
that such is its scope. For instance, it is insisted that "Congress
has by the proviso enacted that in all cases" "the administrative
rule of
res judicata shall not prevail against a judicial
decision," and that the purpose of the provision was to remove the
bar of all statutes of limitations as to every case to which the
enactment relates. The extreme result of the proposition is thus
made apparent. That its assertion is not academic becomes obvious
when it is observed that maintaining it is essential to meet the
requirements of the case, since without the asserted doctrine of
new promise and the contention as to the removal of the bar of
statutes of limitation, the claim sued on would not be justiciable,
and could be barred by limitations.
Page 231 U. S. 637
Coming to test the proposition by the text of the provision, it
is seen that it consists simply of an item in a general
appropriation act applying a designated sum to pay an enumerated
class of cases, of which this is not one, accompanied with a
proviso concerning the steps to be taken to ascertain and pay the
claims appropriated for. This makes it clear that the sole ground
upon which the proposition rests is a disregard of all that portion
of the provision which precedes the word "provided," thus treating
the latter part of the whole clause as distinct and independent
legislation.
In other words, the only avenue of approach for the proposition
is through a gateway created by wrenching the provision asunder. We
are of opinion that this may not be done.
White v. United
States, 191 U. S. 545;
Georgia Banking Company v. Smith, 128 U.
S. 174,
128 U. S. 181.
But it is insisted that the words following the word "provided" do
not technically amount to a proviso, and therefore the clause must
be divided into two independent parts, consisting the one of that
portion which goes before the word "provided," and the other that
portion which follows it. And when this is done, the argument is
that the word "all" in the latter portion renders it necessary to
give to that portion the far-reaching significance claimed.
Conceding for argument's sake that the latter part of the provision
-- that is, the portion which follows the word "provided" -- may
not be technically a proviso, nevertheless the fact that the two
provisions are united in enactment is one and the same clause,
giving no intrinsic manifestation of a legislative purpose to
separate them, causes the concession to be without influence in
determining the proper construction of the provision. It is,
however, urged that, at the time of the enactment of the clause,
there were pending before Congress various bills concerning the
action of the executive departments in failing to apply the rulings
of this Court
Page 231 U. S. 638
as to longevity pay, and therefore the provision must have been
intended to remedy the evil by the adoption of a general provision
accomplishing the results here claimed. The premise, if conceded,
serves to refute, instead of to sustain, the proposition based on
it, for if it be that the purpose of Congress was to unsettle the
entire past administrative action as to all claims against the
government, and to confuse the entire administration for the
future, it cannot be conceived that such a radical intent would
have been expressed in such an obscure and uncertain manner. And
this leads us finally to examine the contention that, as in modern
practice it has become common to adopt independent legislation on
appropriation bills by what is called a "rider," therefore the
provision here involved should be treated as having that character,
and be accordingly independently interpreted as claimed. But
whatever be the new habit, it can in no respect serve to relieve
the judiciary, when called upon to consider a statute, of the old
duty of correctly interpreting it. Indeed, the very suggestion of
the practice of "riders" admonishes that things may not be so
associated as one for the purpose of securing the enactment of
legislation upon the theory that they are one, and, when enacted,
be disassociated for the purpose of judicial construction so as to
cause them to be wholly independent one of the other.
Affirmed.