Alphonso Wetmore, in Error v. The United States

35 U.S. 647, 9 L. Ed. 567, 10 Pet. 647, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 22, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 U.S. 647 (Alphonso Wetmore, in Error v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alphonso Wetmore, in Error v. The United States, 35 U.S. 647, 9 L. Ed. 567, 10 Pet. 647, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 466 (1836).

Opinion

Mr Justice Wayne

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error from the district court of the United States for the district of Missouri, to have a judgment reversed, which was rendered for the United States, against the plaintiff in error.

R was admitted on the trial, that the defendant had served as paymaster of the army, duly appointed as such, from the 24th April 1816, to the 31st May 1831. That the amount-claimed from him *651 by the United States was the.difference between the pay and emoluments allowed by the. accounting officers of the treasury to the defendant, and the amount claimed and retained by him during the period of his service. The defendant had retained the pay and emoluments allowed by law to officers of the general staff of the army, of the rank of major. Upon the trial, the defendant offered as evidence two army registers; one published by the adjutant and inspector-general of the army.in August 1816, the other published in 1831, which'had been delivered to himself and other officers of the army. In both, the officers of the pay departure it are-arranged as belonging to or appertaining to the general staff of the army. He also offered as evidence a general order, issued by the major-general commanding in chief, dated at head quarters of. the army, adjutant-general’s office, Washington, the 11th June 1832; which directs, that the .general staff is to include the officers of the pay department. .These registers, and the general order, the court refused to allow to be-read as evidence to the jury; and no further evidence being offered by-the defendant, he moved the court to instruct the jury.:

1st. That the'defendant is entitled to the pay and emoluments allowed by-law to the officers of the general staff of the army, of the rank of major; that is to say, the pay and emoluments allowed- to majors of light dragoons by the act of congress of the 12th April -1808.

2d. That if the jury find, from the evidence,, that the defendant was, from the 24th April 1816 to thé time of the statement of the account read in: evidence, an officer in.the general staff of the army; he is entitled, for the time hé has served, to the pay and emoluments allowed by law to the officers of the general staff of the rank of major.

" The court refused to give the instructions; and instructed the jury.' that the defendant, in virtue of his office, was entitled only to receive the pay and emoluments of a major of infantry.

These registers, however, and the general order of the major-general, with the general regulations of the army printed and published by the war department in the year 1825, have, since the writ of error was sued out, been admitted, by the consent of the attorney-, general, to be a part of the original record, as if they had been referred to and stated iff the bill of exceptions, aiid had been proved on-the-trial. And it is further admitted by the attorney-general and the defendant’s counsel, that the custom and usage off the army have always been, to class the officers of the pay department .among the officers of the general staff of the a.rmy; and that since the act of *652 the 24th April 1816, for the organization of the general staff, &c., it has been the inyariable usage and practice of the treasury department, and of the proper accounting officers, to allow the pay and emoluments of a major of cavalry to the assistant adjutants-general, to the assistant inspectors-general, to the deputy quarlermastersgeneral, and to the topographical engineers; and since the act of the 2d March 1821, to majors on ordnance duty, and to the quartermasters.

It is but proper, however, to remark, that the court did right in rejecting the registers and general order, when the defendant offered them as evidence on the trial. The registers are compilations issued and published to the army by the direction of the secretary at war, in the exercise of his official authority; and when authenticated by him, would be evidence of the facts, strictly so, they may contain; such as the names of officers, dafe of commissions, promotions, resignations, and regimental rank, brevet and oth'er rank, or the department of the army to which officers belong: but from none of these can an inference be drawn by a jury to establish the pay and emoluments of officers; as they are provided for by law, and must be determined by the court when they are doubtful, and the subject of dispute in a suit between an officer and the United States. Nor can such registers be evidence of the correctness of any classification of the officers of departments into a general staff of the army: for though they are probably correct, being prepared by persons whose professional duty it is to be well informed upon the subject, and who, from their familiarity with military science and the general arrangement of armies, are supposed to be expert interpreters of the acts of congress for the organization of our army; still, what officers are of the staff, or general staff, depends upon acts of congress, which are to be expounded by the courts, when an officer claims a judicial determination of his rights as to pay and emoluments, from his having been arranged as belonging to the staff.

However, we are not now called on to say what officers make up the general staff, or what departments of the army may be assigned to it, ór are .comprehended in it by the acts of congress; noris.it necessary for the decision of this case, to deny that paymasters may not be arranged as of the staff, under the act of the 2d March 1821. Copsidering the staff as a central point of military operations, whence should proceed all general orders for the army, the orders of detail, of instruction, of movement, all general measures for subsisting, *653 paying and clothing the army; and as the administrative organ of all supplies for the military service and land defence of the country: it seems to us, that paymasters, from their duties and responsibilities, should be classed with the general staff; and we presume it has been done under the act of the 2d March 1821, which, without being express upon the point, has rendered indeterminate the previous acts of congress fixing with certainty the officers composing the staff. Conceding, then, for the purposes of this argument, that paymasters are of the staff; does it strengthen the claim of the defendant to the pay and emoluments of a major of cavalry 1

The position taken in favour of cavalry pay is, that paymasters, being of the general staff, are entitled, by the third section of the act of the 24th April 1816, to the pay and emoluments allowed by law to the officers of the general staff of the rank of major. The third section declares, “that regimental and battalion paymasters shall receive the pay and emoluments of majors,” without the additional words of cavalry or infantry. The ninth section of the same act secures to the several officers of the staff the privileges, pay and emoluments of the act of the 3d March 1813. By the third section of that act, the assistant adjutajits-general, assistant inspectors-general, deputy quartermasters-general, and assistant topographical engineers, are-declared to have the brevet rank and the pay and emoluments of a major of cavalry.

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Bluebook (online)
35 U.S. 647, 9 L. Ed. 567, 10 Pet. 647, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alphonso-wetmore-in-error-v-the-united-states-scotus-1836.