An Act of Congress passed on 2 July, 1836, 5 Stat. 83, directs
that where any money has been paid out of the funds of the Post
Office Department to any person in consequence of fraudulent
representations or by mistake, collusion, or misconduct of any
officer or clerk of the department, the Postmaster General shall
institute a suit to recover it back.
Where the person who was the Chief Clerk and Treasurer of the
Post Office Department transferred to the department a deposit
which he had made, in his own name, in a bank which had become
broken, and in consequence of such transfer received the full value
of the deposit from the department, it was a case which fell within
the statute, and the adjudication of the Postmaster General,
ordering the person to be credited upon the books and to receive
the money, cannot be considered a final adjudication, closing the
transaction from judicial scrutiny.
The rules and regulations of the Post Office Department placed
the whole subject of finance under the charge of the chief clerk.
It was within the range of his official duties, therefore, to
superintend all matters relating to finance, and he was not
entitled to charge a commission for negotiating loans for the use
of the department.
This suit was instituted by the United States against Obadiah B.
Brown upon an account, two items only of which were disputed. Upon
one of these items the instruction of the court to the jury was
unfavorable to Brown, and he took a bill of exceptions to it. This
constituted the first case. Upon the second item, the instruction
was unfavorable to the United States, and it excepted.
The account upon which the suit was brought was as follows,
viz.:
Page 50 U. S. 488
image:a
The two items in dispute were the charges of $2,500 and
$2,088.61. The first of these,
viz., that of $2,500, is
not the first taken up in the bill of exceptions or in the opinion
of the Court. In both, the latter item of $2,088.61 is treated and
disposed of in the first instance.
The whole of the facts in the case are set forth in the two
bills of exceptions, which are recited in the opinion of the Court.
It is therefore unnecessary to repeat them here.
Page 50 U. S. 489
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts of this case, and the questions of law arising
therefrom, will appear in the following statement of the
proceedings in the circuit court.
In the year 1839, the United States instituted an action on the
case against the defendant in error to recover of him the sum of
$4,588.61 in obedience to the directions of the seventeenth section
of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1836, 5 Stat. 83, which
declares
"That in all cases where any sum or sums of money have been paid
out of the funds of the Post Office Department to any individual or
individuals under pretense that service has been performed
therefor, when in fact such service has not been performed, or by
way of additional allowance for increased service actually rendered
when the additional allowance exceeds the sum which, by the
provisions of the law, might rightfully have been allowed therefor,
and in all other cases where moneys of the department have been
paid over to any person in consequence of fraudulent
representations or by mistake, collusion, or misconduct of any
officer or clerk of the department, it shall be the duty of the
Postmaster General to cause suit to be brought in the name of the
United States of America to recover back the same or the excess, as
the case may be, with interest thereon. "
Page 50 U. S. 490
The declaration counted upon an
insimul computassent
upon money paid, upon money lent and advanced, and upon money had
and received. The account exhibiting the claim of the United States
consisted of four items, and is in the following form.
image:a
"I certify that the foregoing is a true statement of the account
of Obadiah B. Brown, late treasurer of the Post Office Department,
as audited and adjusted at this office."
"In testimony whereof I have hereunto subscribed my name and
caused to be affixed my seal of office at Washington this 22 July
in the year 1839."
"C. K. GARDINER"
"
Auditor of the Treasury for Post Office
Department"
The second and fourth items of this account were extinguished by
credits equal to their amount; the first and third items were alone
contended for by the United States. The jury found a verdict for
the plaintiffs for the first item and rejected the third under the
instruction of the circuit court.
At the trial, bills of exception to the rulings of the court
were sealed at the instance of both the plaintiffs and the
defendant, and a writ of error is prosecuted by either party in
this Court.
The proofs set forth in the bills of exception and the rulings
of the circuit court upon the prayers appended to those bills are
made a part of this statement so far as is necessary to present the
questions brought up for review.
"The plaintiffs, to sustain the issues joined on their part and
to establish their right to recover the third item in the account,
of $2,088.61, gave evidence by competent testimony that on 3 May,
1833, the defendant made a private deposit of his own funds in the
Bank of Maryland of the sum of $2,000,
Page 50 U. S. 491
bearing interest at the rate of five percentum per annum, and
received a certificate therefor. That the defendant was at the time
of said deposit, and continued until 1 February, 1835, to be, the
Chief Clerk and Treasurer of the Post Office Department. That on 5
June, 1833, the Post Office Department borrowed of the Bank of
Maryland $50,000, payable at nine and twelve months, and gave to
the said bank two certificates of $25,000 each in acknowledgment of
this loan. These certificates were signed by the defendant, as
treasurer of the department. That on 22 June, 1833, the Bank of
Maryland borrowed of the Union Bank of Maryland $50,000, and
deposited said loan certificates as collateral security
therefor."
"That on 22 March, 1834, the Bank of Maryland failed, and the
Post Office Department, shortly after, knew of that fact. That on
22 March, 1834, the Bank of Maryland made a general assignment to
John B. Morris and Richard W. Gill as trustees for the benefit of
its creditors. And that both the Post Office Department and
defendant were notified of said assignment to the Union Bank of the
post office certificates as early as 8 April, 1834."
"That immediately on the announcement of the failure of the Bank
of Maryland, its certificates of deposit depreciated in value to
the amount of eighty percent, and continued gradually to depreciate
until some three or four years after, when they had fallen as low
as twenty-five percent. That on or about 9 September, 1834, N.
Williams, Esq., the district Attorney of the United States, and
acting as such, procured to be made on said certificate of deposit
given to said defendant the endorsement thereon signed by J. B.
Morris and R. W. Gill."
" Mr. Wilson, Cashier:"
" Release the within certificate, with interest up 22 March, on
deposit to be checked for."
"J. B. MORRIS"
"R. W. GILL,
Trustees"
"3 September, 1834"
"And said certificate, with the endorsement of the defendant
Brown and of said Morris and Gill was then by him presented to the
Bank of Maryland by said Williams, acting as aforesaid, and the
said certificate was then and by it cancelled, and a credit given
for the amount, with the interest up to 22 March, 1834, to the Post
Office Department, being the amount of two
Page 50 U. S. 492
thousand and eighty-eight dollars sixty-one cents; this credit
was given on 9 September, 1834, and in a day or two after, on the
receipt of the account showing said credit, corresponding entries
were made on the books of the department charging said bank in
general account with said sum of two thousand and eighty-eight
dollars sixty-one cents and crediting O. B. Brown, Treasurer
&c., with the like sum."
That early in February, 1835, the defendant retired from his
office in the Post Office Department, and afterwards, on 19
February, 1835, the Postmaster General caused a requisition to be
made out in favor of the defendant for the sum of $2,088.61, and
upon this requisition a corresponding check was drawn, payable to
his order, for the like amount, which, being endorsed by him, was
duly paid, which sum so paid is that now sought to be recovered.
That on or about 5 December, 1836, an arrangement was made between
the said Union Bank and the then Postmaster General under which the
defendant was recharged with the sum of $2,088.61, and the Union
Bank thereupon gave the bond of indemnity in the following
words.
" Know all men by these presents that we, the President and
Directors of the Union Bank of Maryland and Robert Mickle, of the
State of Maryland, are held and firmly bound unto the United States
in the full and just sum of four thousand dollars, current money of
the United States, to be paid to the said United States, to which
payment, well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves and each of
us, firmly and severally, by these presents. Sealed with our seals,
and dated this 5 December in the year 1836."
" Whereas, Amos Kendall, Postmaster General of the United
States, hath allowed and paid to the President and Directors of the
Union Bank of Maryland the sum of two thousand and eighty-eight
61/100 dollars, claimed to be due to the said bank from the Post
Office Department, which claim was disallowed by William T. Barry,
former Postmaster General of the United States, and the amount so
claimed by the said bank was paid to a certain O. B. Brown by the
said Barry, on the ground that a debt due to the said Brown from
the Bank of Maryland could be legally set off against the claim of
said Union Bank, and the said Amos Kendall, as Postmaster General
as aforesaid, having allowed and paid the claim of said Union Bank,
and recharged the said O. B. Brown with the amount so received by
him, is about to sue the said O. B. Brown for the same, in which
suit the validity of said setoff may be brought in question. "
Page 50 U. S. 493
" Now the condition of the above obligation is such that if the
validity of said setoff should in the said suit be sustained by a
judicial decision, and the said Union Bank shall thereupon, on
demand, fail to repay the said sum of two thousand and eighty-eight
61/100 dollars, with legal interest thereon from the time they
received the same, the above obligation to be in full force;
otherwise to be void."
"H. W. EVANS [SEAL]"
"
President of the Union Bank of Maryland"
"R. MICKLE [SEAL]"
" Signed, sealed, and delivered in presence of"
" CH. A. WILLAMSON"
"Whereupon the plaintiffs closed their testimony, and the
defendant prayed the court to instruct the jury that, on the
evidence aforesaid, if believed by the jury, the plaintiffs are not
entitled to recover the said item of $2,088.61."
"And the court, being of the opinion that by the evidence
aforesaid it appeared that the former Postmaster General Barry had,
within the scope of his official authority and with full possession
of the facts involved in the case, adjudicated the question of the
right of the defendant to receive the said item of $2,088.61, and,
under the said adjudication, the same had been paid to the
defendant, and that this Court has no authority to review and
reverse the said adjudication for errors of law therein, and that,
from the evidence aforesaid, the jury cannot infer mistake of fact,
collusion, or misconduct of the said Postmaster General, gave the
instruction as prayed, to which instruction, as given, the
plaintiffs excepted."
"The defendant having admitted the receipt by him of the sum of
$2,500, as charged in plaintiffs' account, offered and read in
evidence an account presented by him to the department, claiming
sundry allowances as for commission for the disbursement of sundry
sums made by him from the contingent fund of the Post Office
Department, and for the like commissions on the sum of $190,000,
being the amount of sundry loans negotiated by him, at the request
of the Postmaster General, for the use of said department, as
charged and claimed in said account, and then gave evidence tending
to prove by credible and competent witnesses that he, the said
defendant, while Chief Clerk of the Post Office Department, was
employed by the said Postmaster General to negotiate said loans;
that he faithfully performed that duty, and did negotiate the
several loans for the sums with the parties and at the times
mentioned in the items of charge in his account. He further gave
testimony
Page 50 U. S. 494
tending to show that no loans were ever made and negotiated by
or for the use of the department except during the period when
Major Barry held the office of Postmaster General, and that no
other officer or clerk attached to the General Post Office had ever
been employed in the negotiation of any loans for the use of said
department; that during the same period of time, another person,
viz., Samuel L. Governeur, then postmaster at New York,
was, in like manner, employed to negotiate similar loans for the
use of said department as a special agent; that loans were thus
negotiated by said Governeur as such special agent, sometimes at a
very high premium, on one occasion paying for the same at the rate
of three percent per month, besides collateral advantages to the
lender; that for the loans thus negotiated by said Governeur, he
claimed and was allowed five percent commission when he lent his
own personal responsibility, and two and a half percent when he
incurred no responsibility, and these commissions were allowed and
credited him by the department in the settlement of his accounts;
that the defendant, in the negotiations entrusted to him, went
personally to Baltimore and Philadelphia, where the same were
conducted and effected, and that he has never received any
remuneration for his services or for his expenses in attending to
said business."
"The defendant further gave parol evidence tending to show that
no negotiations of loans, other than those made by the defendant,
were ever made by the Post Office Department or by the department's
chief clerk, and such duties had never, before or since, been
performed by any other chief clerk or treasurer, and that if any
other person had been employed to perform said business, not
connected with the department, such person would have claimed and
received a compensation of two and a half percent commission on the
amount so borrowed."
"And thereupon the plaintiffs offered further evidence to prove
that during all the time aforesaid in which the loans aforesaid
were negotiated by the defendant, he was Chief Clerk and Treasurer
of the Post Office Department, and as such received a stated salary
fixed by law, and, as treasurer, had charge of the financial duties
of the department; that the general outline of his duties is stated
in the published rules and regulations of March 4, 1833, issued by
the Postmaster General, but there were other minor duties for which
there were verbal directions; that the disbursements of the
contingent expenses of the department, and the settlement of
accounts therefor at the Treasury down to the year 1815 had been by
the Postmaster General, and since that year by officers of the
department
Page 50 U. S. 495
assigned to that duty in addition to their other duties; that
the defendant was disbursing agent from 1829 to some time in
February, 1835, and as such settled quarterly accounts of his
agency at the Treasury; that no allowance had ever been made for
such services beyond the stated salaries of the officers, and none
had been asked for by any officer except by the defendant, long
after he had settled his accounts, and had retired from office;
that before and during and ever since the years 1833 and 1834, in
which said loans were negotiated by defendant, it was the frequent
usage of the department for the Postmaster General to send its
officers to points of the country distant from the office on
special business connected with their respective branches of the
service, and they had never claimed or been allowed any
compensation therefor except their casual expenses, in addition to
their stated salaries, which continued to run on during their
absence, and that no distinction was known or recognized in this
respect between the financial and other divisions of the
department; that during his treasurership, the defendant had made
no claim for commissions on the loans aforesaid made by him; that
his predecessor in charge of the financial department was the First
Assistant Postmaster General, who held the office during several
years, down to March, 1843, and during that time, by direction of
the Postmaster General, negotiated with distant banks for
permission to make two overdrafts, of $50,000 each, for which
interest was to be allowed and which were to be repaid by deposits
of the revenues of the department as collected; that he rendered
these services, as essential portions of his duties, under charge
of the financial division of the department, and never expected to
receive any compensation therefor beyond his regular salary; that
no other loans are known to have been negotiated by the department,
nor are commissions known to have been allowed to officers of the
department for any special services rendered by them for the
department, and further offered evidence to prove that in the
Treasury Department the contingent expenses and salaries of
officers, amounting to the monthly sum of $70,000, were always
disbursed by officers of the Treasury assigned to the duty, in
addition to their ordinary duties, without any charge or claim of
extra compensation, and that officers of this department were sent
on missions to New York connected with public loans, and were never
allowed any compensation beyond their expenses."
"And the defendant further gave evidence tending to prove that
the arrangement made for the overdrawing of the $50,000, made by
the First Assistant Postmaster General, was performed
Page 50 U. S. 496
through the instrumentality of an agent in New York, acting
under instructions from said assistant; that it was not regarded as
a loan, but as an agreement upon the promise of regular deposits,
sometimes leaving large balances in favor of the government to meet
and pay the drafts of the department in case no funds belonging to
it were at the time in deposit, to the extent of $50,000; that the
defendant had made similar arrangements for the department with
other banks at different times to the amount of $500,000, and had
never claimed compensation for this as an extra service, or
received any such compensation therefor."
"Upon the whole of the evidence so given by the parties
respectively, the counsel for the United States prayed the court to
instruct the jury as follows,
viz.:"
" That on the whole of said evidence, if believed by the jury,
the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the said sum of $2,500, and
that defendant is not entitled to set off against that item any
value of his services in negotiating said loans, or for the
disbursement of the contingent fund, as claimed by him in his said
account. To the giving of which instruction the defendant by his
counsel objected, but the court overruled the objection and gave
the instruction as prayed, to which ruling of the court the
defendant excepted."
The inquiries arising upon this record involve to some extent an
examination of the powers and duties of the Postmaster General in
the administration of his office, and embrace also a construction
of the seventeenth section of the statute of June 2, 1835, with
respect to the directions to the Postmaster General to prosecute
for any of the delinquencies or misfeasances enumerated in that
section; they imply moreover an examination on the part of this
Court as to how far the acts of the defendant below, as
characterized by the proofs on the record, fall within either
category of a payment out of the funds of the Post Office
Department under pretense of services which have not been performed
-- or of an allowance for services actually performed, exceeding
the compensation permitted by law -- or of money paid over to a
person in consequence of fraudulent representations -- or by
mistake, or collusion, or misconduct of any officer or clerk of the
department.
Without undertaking in the solution of these inquiries to define
with perfect exactness the powers of the Postmaster General or to
deny or affirm any implied general power in that officer to make
loans on the credit or responsibility of the government, we think
it may be safely assumed that such a power, if vested in that
officer, must be limited to acts inseparable
Page 50 U. S. 497
from the exigencies of the department over which he presides --
acts necessarily incident to its regular, legitimate operations. It
never can be extended to a right in the Postmaster General, at his
discretion, to contract loans, or to borrow money upon mere
calculations of contingent or speculative advantage to the
department; much less can it embrace the right in this officer to
deal
ad libitum in stocks, or bonds, or evidences of debt,
or in certificates of deposit, either with corporations or
individuals, when these subjects of traffic can in no wise be
connected with the necessary or beneficial operations of the
department, nor can indeed be in any sense connected with that
department except to render the latter a guarantee for the profit
of others with whom such transactions may take place.
Under the principles here assumed and which are deemed by this
Court to be undeniable, let us look more nearly at this payment of
$2,088.61, made by order of the Postmaster General to the defendant
and at the circumstances under which it was made in order to
ascertain how far such payment, and the retention of the amount by
the defendant, are warranted by these principles. It should here be
borne in mind that for some time previously, and to a period of
nearly eleven months after the failure of the Bank of Maryland, the
defendant was not only the Chief Clerk but the Treasurer of the
Post Office Department. He was therefore necessarily acquainted not
only with the internal details of the department and clothed with
the control of its pecuniary operations, but was also acquainted
with the condition and character of those from whom loans to the
department were obtained -- indeed he assumes much credit to
himself for this knowledge and his acts based upon it, and makes
them in part the foundation of his claim for commissions on the
moneys he had negotiated. But in addition to this implication it is
stated in the proofs that the Post Office Department was informed
in March, 1834, of the failure of the Bank of Maryland, and that as
early as 8 April following, both the department and the defendant
were notified of the assignment to the Union Bank of the Post
Office certificates for $50,000. However possible it may be that
the head of the department remained individually ignorant of the
several occurrences above mentioned, they warrant a fair -- nay, a
necessary -- legal conclusion to affect him with every consequence
deducible from facts which it was within the range of his duty to
know. But whatever suppositions may be indulged with respect to the
head of the department, they cannot avert from the defendant the
consequences of acts notoriously, designedly, and personally
performed by himself.
Page 50 U. S. 498
"Thus situated -- under these striking facts and circumstances
-- being still the chief clerk and treasurer of the department,
with full knowledge of the failure of the Bank of Maryland and of
the transfer to the Union Bank of the certificates of debt for
$50,000, the defendant himself withdraws his depreciated
certificate of deposit from the insolvent Bank of Maryland, and on
9 September, 1834, more than five months after the failure of that
bank, transfers it, with the interest which had accrued thereon, to
the Post Office Department at par. It is true he does not sign the
order for the payment to himself, for he had a few days previously
withdrawn from his situation in the department, but he obtained
from the Postmaster General a requisition on the acting treasurer
of the department for payment, and obtained on 19 February, 1835, a
check from that acting treasurer for the amount of his depreciated
certificate, with the interest thereon, at par, and received
payment at that rate."
"Upon considering the position laid down by the circuit court
that this transaction was within the scope of the official
authority of the Postmaster General, we are irresistibly led to
inquire what could have been its object? Could this possibly have
been to improve the credit or to facilitate the operations of the
department? If so, how could either of these ends be promoted by
wasting the money of the government that it might become the holder
of a claim upon a notoriously insolvent corporation? Could the
object have been to possess a setoff against the claims held by the
Union Bank? If so, then surely the defendant should have been
allowed nothing beyond the value of the certificate procured from
him, and that was literally nothing. If we could impute to the head
of the department the design to favor a subaltern in office, this
too would be equally irregular and inadmissible with either of the
solutions above suggested. In no view of this transaction have we
been able to regard it as falling within the scope of the
Postmaster General's authority. On the contrary, it has appeared to
us as illegal and irregular, and, so far as the head of the
department was concerned, as perhaps flowing either from want of
information or from the absence of vigilant personal supervision of
the details of office and of the conduct of inferior agents. But
whatever may be the true explanation of the course of the
Postmaster General, that explanation can have no bearing in
justification of the conduct of the defendant or in support of his
pretension to withhold from the government the amount paid for his
certificate. As the immediate actor throughout this transaction,
giving it form and direction in all its progress, he could not but
know the
Page 50 U. S. 499
right in which he held the certificate of deposit in the Bank of
Maryland. He could not but know the failure of that bank, and the
consequent worthlessness of the certificate held by him, and the
injustice and fraud of the contrivance by which he palmed that
certificate upon the government, and obtained thereby the amount of
it at par. In this view of the transaction, we consider the payment
to the defendant of the sum of $2,088.61, by direction of the
Postmaster General, as illegal and void, and the case of the
defendant as coming regularly within the meaning of the provision,
which is mandatory in directing proceedings like the present for
the recovery of moneys of the department that have been paid over
to any person in consequence of fraudulent representations, or by
mistake or misconduct of any officer or clerk of the department,
and therefore as rendering the defendant liable to refund the
amount so paid to him, with interest thereon."
In the decision of the circuit court upon the prayer to the
second bill of exceptions, sealed at the instance of the defendant
below, this Court can perceive no error. Upon adverting to the
printed rules and regulations for the government of the Post Office
Department adopted on 4 March, 1833, and referred to in the
defendant's exception, we find in the eighth rule the following
provision:
"The third division will be that of finance, under the
superintendence of the Chief Clerk, Obadiah B. Brown, who shall be
treasurer of the department. There shall be under his control the
bookkeeper's, the solicitor's office, and the pay office."
The language of this rule, if standing singly, must be
understood as sufficiently comprehensive to embrace everything
relating to finance -- to the fiscal concerns of the department,
and it must be perceived too that all the functions and duties
comprehended within this rule are attached to the office of chief
clerk. It is as chief clerk and by virtue of his office of chief
clerk that the entire subject of finance and financial
administration is devolved on him. The only singularity marking
this arrangement is the fact of its associating the powers and
duties created by it peculiarly with this defendant individually,
by declaring that the division of finance shall be under the
superintendence of the chief clerk, O. B. Brown.
But beyond this general provision contained in rule eighth of
the Post Office regulations, it will be found on examination that
the whole of the remaining rules, extending to number twenty-four,
are made up of a detail of duties to be performed with respect to
receipts, deposits of money, payments and disbursements, by this
treasurer, so constituted in virtue of his
Page 50 U. S. 500
office of chief clerk, for which last office he received a
stated salary. By what course of reasoning, then, it could be shown
that the peculiar or appropriate duties of this officer were not
his duties, but were performed by him in lieu of some other agent,
and became therefore the foundation for extra compensation this
Court are unable to comprehend. Some instances of extra
compensation allowed at the department have been adduced in support
of the claim of the defendant to commissions in this case, and
several authorities have been cited from this Court which are
supposed to tend to its establishment.
With respect to the former, this Court cannot consider them as
entitled to the smallest weight; we feel bound to regard them as
wholly irregular, and as examples rather to be censured and
shunned, than as precedents to be approved and followed. Between
the cases of
United States v. Ripey, of
United States
v. McDaniel, of
Same v. Fillebrown, relied on for the
defendant, and that now before us we can discern an obvious
distinction. Without undertaking here to discuss the force of those
decisions as authority upon this question, we may safely say that
they were commended to the judgment of this Court by the conviction
that they were founded on services which appertained not to the
regular official stations and duties of the claimants -- services,
too, actually performed, and untinged by any hue or shade of
contrivance or
mala fides, and really beneficial in their
character to those for whom they were performed. We deem it
unnecessary further particularly to contrast those claims with that
of the defendant in the case before us. But whatever may have been
understood to be decided, or whatever may in truth have been
decided, by the cases above mentioned, the principles established
by this Court in the decisions of
Gratiot v.
United States, 4 How. 80, and of
United
States v. Buchanan, 8 How. 83, we consider as
furnishing the true rule as to allowances for extra services; by
that rule, we conceive that the pretension of the defendant to
commissions on loans, as set forth in the proceedings in this case,
must be utterly condemned. This Court, therefore, approving of so
much of the decision of the circuit court as disallowed those
commissions, do hereby adjudge that the writ of error of the
defendant below to this decision be
Dismissed, and disapproving as erroneous so much of the
judgment of the circuit court as authorizes the said defendant to
claim against the United States the amount of the certificate of
deposit from the Bank of Maryland transferred by him to the Post
Office Department, we hereby adjudge and order that this judgment
be reversed and that this
Page 50 U. S.
501
cause be remanded to the circuit court, to be proceeded in
conformably with the principles herein above declared.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Columbia holden in and for the County of Washington and was argued
by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and
adjudged by this Court that the judgment of the said circuit court
in this cause be and the same is hereby reversed, and that this
cause be and the same is hereby remanded to the said circuit court
with directions to award a
venire facias de novo and for
such further proceedings to be had therein as may be in conformity
to the opinion of this Court and as to law and justice may
appertain.