Under the Act of June 10, 1922, a lieutenant of the Staff Corps
of the Navy, who has served for fifteen years as enlisted man,
warrant officer, and commissioned officer, and whose first
appointment to
Page 278 U. S. 61
the permanent service was as a lieutenant, junior grade, of the
Staff Corps, corresponding to a first lieutenant in the Army, is
not entitled to pay of the fourth period if his total commissioned
service does not equal that of a lieutenant commander of the line
of the Navy drawing the pay of that period. P.
278 U. S.
62.
63 Ct.Cls. 420 reversed.
Certiorari, 276 U.S. 612, to a judgment of the Court of Claims
allowing a claim for pay presented by a lieutenant in the Navy.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a claim by a lieutenant of the Staff Corps of the Navy,
under the Act of June 10, 1922, c. 212, 42 Stat. 625 (Code, Title
37, §§ 1, 4) which went into effect on July 1, 1922,
that, by § 1 of that Act, he is entitled to pay of the fourth
period there mentioned from the date of the Act to April 23, 1924,
amounting to $1,935.89. On the last date, he had served seventeen
years, as enlisted man and officer, and since then has received
fourth period pay. The Court of Claims gave the claimant judgment
for the sum named. A writ of certiorari was granted by this Court
on March 5, 1928. 276 U.S. 612.
As stated by his counsel, the claimant had been in continuous
service for over fifteen years when the Act took effect, about
eleven years as enlisted man, six months as a warrant officer, and
three and a half years as commissioned officer. His first
appointment in the permanent service in the Navy was as a
lieutenant, junior grade, of the Staff Corps, corresponding to a
first lieutenant in the
Page 278 U. S. 62
Army. The pay of the fourth period, $3,000, is given
"to lieutenants of the Staff Corps of the Navy, and lieutenants
and lieutenants (junior grade) of the line and Engineer Corps of
the Coast Guard whose total commissioned service equals that of
lieutenant commanders of the line of the Navy drawing the pay of
this period."
The absence of a comma after "Coast Guard" is laid hold of to
show that the qualification as to commissioned service applies only
to the last clause, and not to lieutenants of the Staff Corps of
the Navy, but no intelligible reason is given for limiting it in
that way. The length of commissioned service seems in reason as
proper a consideration in determining the pay of one class as of
the other. If, then, the claimant's total commissioned service must
have equaled that of lieutenant commanders of the Navy drawing
fourth period pay, we are of opinion that his claim must fail.
The pay of the fourth period is given by the same section to
lieutenant commanders of the Navy
"who have completed fourteen years' service, or whose first
appointment in the permanent service was in a grade above that
corresponding to second lieutenant in the Army."
The claimant points out that his first appointment corresponded,
as we have said, to that of a first lieutenant in the Army. But the
requirement is that his commissioned service should equal that of
lieutenant commanders. If this could be satisfied by any service
less than the fourteen years, the alternative would be that of a
lieutenant commander drawing fourth period pay whose total service
was not more than what the claimant can show.
It is argued that, by the Act of March 3, 1883, c. 97, § 1,
22 Stat. 473 (Code, Title 34, § 231), all service of the
officer was put on the footing of commissioned service, and that,
by this same § 1 of the Act of 1922 now before us,
"For officers in the service on June 30, 1922, there shall be
included in the computation all service which is now counted
Page 278 U. S. 63
in computing longevity pay."
But when Congress, with all this before it, specified
commissioned service, we must take it to have meant commissioned
service, and not something else that, for other purposes, was just
as good.
The same paragraph of the same section gives pay of the fourth
period to lieutenants of the Navy "who have completed seventeen
years' service." Under that provision, the claimant's service as an
enlisted man is counted, and he now gets the pay. But this brings
out the contrast embodied in the words between service and
commissioned service. Assuming that lieutenant commanders could
make out their fourteen years by counting service rendered before
they received commissions, still it is the commissioned service of
the claimant that must equal that of the lieutenant commanders, and
we repeat the claimant shows no case of a lieutenant commander
whose service, or even whose commissioned service, was not more
than about three years and a half. The statute is not very clear,
but we are of opinion that the government is right in denying the
claim.
Judgment reversed.