1. Although a proviso is sometimes used to introduce independent
legislation, the presumption is that, in accordance with its
primary purpose, it applies only to the provision to which it is
attached. P.
266 U. S.
534.
2. A proviso may be examined in the light of prior legislation,
the condition it was evidently intended to correct, and its
legislative history. P.
266 U. S.
535.
Page 266 U. S. 532
3. The provisos found in the Army Appropriation Act of 1915, and
191, which granted additional pay to clerks and messengers at
headquarters of territorial departments, etc., while serving in the
Philippine Islands, are confined to those positions for which
specific salaries were appropriated by the preceding clause to
which the provisos are attached, and are inapplicable to a chief
clerk of the depot quartermaster's office at Manila whose salary
was fixed by the War Department and paid out of lump sums
appropriated elsewhere in these statutes. P.
266 U. S.
534.
58 Ct. Clms. 20 reversed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims rejecting a claim
for additional pay.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the construction of a proviso in the Army
Appropriation Acts of 1914 and 1915, relating to an increase in the
pay of clerks and messengers at headquarters of territorial
departments. 38 Stat. 351, 355, c. 72; 38 Stat. 1062, 1067, c.
143.
This proviso follows a special appropriation made, in
substantially identical language, in the two Acts. In the Act of
1915, this provision reads:
"Pay to Clerks, Messengers, and Laborers at Headquarters of the
Several Territorial Departments, Territorial Districts, Tactical
Divisions and Brigades, Service Schools and Office of the Chief of
Staff."
"One chief clerk at the office of the Chief of Staff, $2,000 per
annum. Fifteen clerks at $1,800 each per annum. Fifteen clerks at
$1,600 each per annum. Thirty-eight
Page 266 U. S. 533
clerks at $1,400 each per annum. Seventy clerks at $1,200 each
per annum. Sixty-five clerks at $1,000 each per annum. . . . Two
messengers at $840 each per annum. Fifty-nine messengers at $720
each per annum. . . . One laborer at $660 per annum. Two laborers
at $600 each per annum. One laborer at $480 per annum. . . . In
all, $312,320."
"Additional pay while on foreign service, $9,000."
"
Provided, That on and after July first, nineteen
hundred and fourteen, the pay of clerks and messengers at
headquarters of territorial departments, tactical divisions,
brigades, and service schools, who are citizens of the United
States shall be increased $200 each per annum while serving in the
Philippine Islands, such service to be computed from the date of
departure from the continental limits of the United States to the
date of return. . . ."
"And said clerks, messengers, and laborers shall be employed and
assigned by the Secretary of War to the offices and positions in
which they are to serve. . . ."
By a separate provision in the Act, a lump sum appropriation of
$1,833,127 was made for incidental expenses of the quartermaster
corps, including the "hire of laborers" and "compensation of clerks
and other employees to the officers" (p. 363). [
Footnote 1]
Morrow, a citizen of the United States, went to the Philippine
Islands in 1899. From May 15, 1914, to January 17, 1917, he served
as chief clerk of the depot quartermaster's office at the
headquarters of the Philippine Department of the Army, in Manila.
He received a salary of $2,000 a year, which was fixed by the War
Department and paid out of the lump sum appropriations for the
quartermaster corps. Later he submitted to the Auditor a claim for
additional pay at the rate of $200 a year for the period of his
service after July 1, 1914, under
Page 266 U. S. 534
the proviso in the acts increasing the pay of clerks and
messengers at headquarters of territorial departments while serving
in the Philippine Islands. This was allowed and paid, but was
thereafter charged against him as having been erroneously paid, and
deducted from the pay then accruing to him as a captain in the
quartermaster's corps. Thereupon he brought this action to recover
the amount claimed, and was awarded judgment. 58 Ct.Cls. 20.
It is conceded that Morrow was a clerk in the quartermaster
corps, and not one of the headquarters [
Footnote 2] clerks included within the first paragraph of
the appropriation.
The contention of the United States [
Footnote 3] is that the proviso applied only to the
headquarters clerks and messengers employed at the statutory
salaries fixed by the appropriation, and did not include clerks in
the quartermaster corps employed at salaries fixed by the War
Department -- that is, that it merely increased the statutory
salaries of the clerks and messengers provided for by the specific
appropriation when they should serve in the Philippine Islands.
This we think is its plain meaning. The general office of a
proviso is to except something from the enacting clause, or to
qualify and restrain its generality and prevent misinterpretation.
Minis v. United
States, 15 Pet. 423,
40 U. S. 445;
Georgia Banking Co. v. Smith, 128 U.
S. 174,
128 U. S. 181;
White v. United States, 191 U. S. 545,
191 U. S. 551;
Cox v. Hart, 260 U. S. 427,
260 U. S. 435.
Its grammatical and logical
Page 266 U. S. 535
scope is confined to the subject matter of the principal clause.
United States v. Whitridge, 197 U.
S. 135,
197 U. S. 143.
And although sometimes used to introduce independent legislation,
the presumption is that, in accordance with its primary purpose, it
refers only to the provision to which it is attached.
United
States v. Falk, 204 U. S. 143,
204 U. S. 149.
Here it clearly appears that the proviso was employed in its
primary sense. The entire context shows that it was intended to
apply only to the headquarters clerks and messengers employed at
the statutory salaries fixed by the special appropriation, and
related to the $9,000 provided for the additional pay of such
employees while on foreign service, and it plainly had no reference
to clerks and messengers in the quartermaster corps whose salaries
were fixed by the War Department under the lump sum
appropriation.
This is emphasized when the proviso is examined in the light of
prior legislation, the condition it was evidently intended to
correct, and its legislative history.
Brushaber v. Union
Pacific Railroad, 240 U. S. 1,
240 U. S. 12;
Work v. United States, ante, p.
266 U. S. 161. In
all of the Army Appropriation Acts from 1895 to 1914, special
appropriations were made for a designated number of clerks and
messengers at headquarters and army stations at specified rates of
pay, but no provision for any increase in their pay while on
foreign service. Lump sum appropriations were also made for staff
corps and departments, including the quartermaster corps, under
which clerks and messengers were employed at rates of pay fixed by
the War Department. In 1904, the War Department issued an order
under which clerks in the staff corps and departments paid under
the lump sum appropriations were granted an increase of $200 in
their annual compensation when transferred to the Philippines.
This, however, could not be applied to the headquarters clerks
whose salaries were fixed by the specific appropriations. In 1912,
the Secretary of War wrote to
Page 266 U. S. 536
the Speaker of the House of Representatives, stating that the
pay of the headquarters clerks who were serving in the Philippines
was not commensurate with their work and less than that of any
other similar government employees in the Islands, and that as
there were "no means" by which the War Department could remedy this
condition, he recommended that Congress insert in the next
appropriation for headquarters employees a proviso that the pay of
such clerks and messengers be increased 20 percentum while serving
in the Philippines. This recommendation was renewed by the
succeeding Secretary of War, prior to the consideration of the Army
Appropriation Bill for 1915. [
Footnote 4] Thereafter, Congress added to the
appropriation the $9,000 for additional pay while on foreign
service, and the proviso relating to the increase of pay while
serving in the Philippines, in the form in which they have been
quoted, these additions being adopted after the proposed increase
had been changed, on a report of the Conference Committee, from 20
percentum, the amount recommended by the Secretaries, to $200 a
year, the increase given by the War Department to clerks in the
staff corps and departments. [
Footnote 5]
In the light of this history, there is no room to doubt -- even
if it were not plain from the face of the Act itself -- that the
proviso was intended to apply merely to the headquarters clerks and
messengers included within the specific appropriation. It
manifestly was not intended that clerks in the staff corps and
departments should receive, in addition to the $200 increase given
them by the War Department, a second increase of like amount under
the terms of the proviso.
It is entirely clear that Morrow's service in the
quartermaster's office in the Philippines was not within the
scope
Page 266 U. S. 537
of the proviso. It is unnecessary to review in detail the
various contentions urged in his behalf. We do not find them
sufficient to sustain the judgment, and it must be and is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
A like provision was contained in the Act of 1916 (p. 1074).
[
Footnote 2]
The term "headquarters" is used in this opinion as including the
various army stations mentioned in the special appropriations.
[
Footnote 3]
In the Court of Claims, the United States contended that Morrow
did not come within the proviso because he was residing in the
Philippine Islands when appointed to the clerkship. This was
apparently the sole contention then made, but, although repeated in
the brief here, it was expressly abandoned by the United States in
the argument at bar.
[
Footnote 4]
63d Cong., 1st Sess., H.R.Doc. No. 46.
[
Footnote 5]
51st Cong.Rec. pt. 6, p. 5592; 63d Cong.2d Sess., Sen.Doc.
469.