The Director of the Veterans Bureau has exclusive authority to
pass upon all claims for payment of adjusted compensation
certificates, and his decision is final unless wholly without
evidential support or wholly dependent upon a question of law, or
clearly arbitrary or capricious. P.
278 U. S.
257.
23 F.2d 792 reversed.
Certiorari, 277 U.S. 580, to a judgment of the circuit court of
appeals which reversed a judgment of the district court dismissing,
for want of jurisdiction, a claim against the government on an
adjusted compensation certificate.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought in the Federal District Court for the
Western District of Pennsylvania to recover upon an adjusted
service certificate issued through the Veterans' Bureau to
respondent's husband under the provisions of the Adjusted
Compensation Act, 43 Stat. 121, c. 157, as amended by the Act of
July 3, 1926, 44 Stat. 826, c. 751. Respondent's petition alleges
the issue of the certificate, the death of the veteran, the
interest of respondent as beneficiary, the filing of proof of her
claim with the Director, and a failure and refusal of the Director
to make
Page 278 U. S. 256
payment after demand upon him. A demurrer to the petition was
sustained by the district court upon the ground that the case
involved a pension claim, in respect of which the courts were
expressly denied jurisdiction. The circuit court of appeals held
otherwise, and sustained the jurisdiction of the district court on
the ground that the certificate embodied an express obligation of
the United States. 23 F.2d 792. We do not find it necessary to
determine whether this view or that of the district court is
correct, but dispose of the case upon a ground urged here by the
government, but apparently, it is fair to say, not suggested to
either court below.
The general administration of the Adjusted Compensation Act is
committed to the Director of the Bureau. Under the terms of the
original act, the certificate is to be issued by that officer upon
certification from the Secretary of War or the Secretary of the
Navy. Section 501. Application first must be made to the Secretary
of War or the Secretary of the Navy, as the case may be, who is
authorized to transmit the same, together with a certificate
setting forth, among other things, the amount of the adjusted
service credit. Sections 302(a), 303(a), as amended. From a
consideration of the whole act, it is clear that these officers
must pass upon the facts which it is claimed justify the issue of
such certificates. Section 310 of the amended act, hereafter
quoted, makes it equally clear that their decisions upon these
facts are final and conclusive. Section 502 authorizes a bank loan
upon the security of an adjusted service certificate. If the loan
be not paid at maturity, the note and certificate must be presented
to the Director, who, in his discretion, may pay the claim and
adjust the remaining balance with the veteran or his beneficiary. A
fund is created in the Treasury of the United States and made
available to the Director for payment of adjusted service
certificates upon their maturity or the
Page 278 U. S. 257
prior death of the veterans to whom issued, and for payments to
banks on account of loans made under § 502 and §§
505-507. Before any certificate can be paid, it must, of course, be
presented to the Director, who necessarily must first decide all
relevant matters in respect of the right of the claimant to receive
payment.
It is not necessary to go further into particulars. A review of
the entire act and the amendments shows, we think, that all
questions relating to the right of any person to a certificate, the
amount of it, etc., and payments to be made under its terms before
or at maturity, are to be determined by the appropriate executive
officer as a basis for his action. The effect of the executive
determination, if that were otherwise doubtful, is set at rest by
the provisions of § 310 of the amended act, which reads:
"The decisions of the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the
Navy, and the Director on all matters within their respective
jurisdictions under the provisions of this act (except the duties
vested in them by Title VII) shall be final and conclusive."
Under the provisions of the act, and in the light of the section
just quoted, we are of opinion that exclusive authority is vested
in the Director of the Bureau to entertain and pass upon all claims
for payment of these certificates. It is evident that when a
certificate is presented to the Director by one claiming to be the
beneficiary, that officer must, as a necessary prerequisite to the
payment, ascertain and determine that the veteran is dead, that the
person claiming payment is in fact the beneficiary, and any other
matter of fact or law which may affect the right of the claimant in
any given case. We may assume that the Director performed that duty
here. The record does not disclose the basis for his action, but
whatever it may have been, his decision is final, at least unless
it be wholly without evidential support or wholly
Page 278 U. S. 258
dependent upon a question of law or clearly arbitrary or
capricious.
Silberschein v. United States, 266 U.
S. 221,
266 U. S. 225,
and cases there cited.
For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
must be reversed and that of the district court dismissing the
petition affirmed.
It is so ordered.