Engagement off Santiago Bay

36 Ct. Cl. 200, 1901 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1900 WL 1397
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 25, 1901
DocketNaval Bounty, 2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Ct. Cl. 200 (Engagement off Santiago Bay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engagement off Santiago Bay, 36 Ct. Cl. 200, 1901 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1900 WL 1397 (cc 1901).

Opinion

Peelle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The auditor of the court, to whom this case was referred to inquire into and report the names of the officers and enlisted men entitled to share, and in what amounts, in the residue of the bounty found due the vessels of the United States employed in the destruction of the Spanish fleet off Santiago Bay, has made his preliminary report herein asking for instructions as to the right of certain claimants, set forth in his report, to share in the distribution of the bounty so awarded.

Under Revised Statutes, section 4635, bounty money is to “ be divided among the officers and crew in the same manner [202]*202as prize money.” Revised Statutes, section 1631, prescribes the manner of the distribution of prize money, while section 1633 provides, among other things, that “no officer or other person who shall have been temporarily absent on duty from a vessel on the books of which he continued to be borne, while so absent, shall be deprived, in consequence of such absence, of any prize money to which he would otherwise be entitled. And he shall continue to share in the captures of the vessels to which he is attached until regularly discharged therefrom.”

It will thus be observed that the distribution of prize money for the capture of vessels of the enemy forms the basis for the distribution of bounty for the destruction of such vessels.

The Auditor for the Navy Department, through whose office prize money is proportioned, under date of November 22, 1898, in a letter to the Secretary of the Navy set forth in the record, formulated the basis which in his opinion should govern in the distribution of prize money, which basis was approved by the Secretary of the Navy as set forth in the record in these words:

“Navy Department,
Washington, November £9, 1898.
“ Sir: After careful consideration thereof this Department concurs in the views embodied in your communication of the 22d instant, No. 6102, concerning the matter of the distribution of prize money and recapitulation therein as follows:
“1. A person absent from his vessel on account of sickness,
' or for his personal convenience, or for any reason except the performance of duty, is not entitled to share.
“2. A person temporarily absent on any authorized duty should share. Any absence caused by a duty temporary in its nature should be considered a temporary absence.
‘ ‘ 3. An officer promoted prior to a capture should share according to his increased pay, though notice of his promotion had not been received at the time of the capture.
“4. An officer promoted subject to examination prior to a capture, who subsequently passes the examination, should share according to his increased pay.
“ 5. An officer promoted in course to fill-a vacancy existing prior to a capture, but whose promotion is completed subsequent thereto, should share according to his increased pay.
“6. An officer whose promotion had its inception subsequent to a capture should share according to his pay at the time of the capture, though the promotion takes effect prior thereto.
[203]*203“7. An enlisted man should share according- to the rating held at the time of a capture, notwithstanding the formal order for such rating was not given nor entered on the books of the ship until after the capture.
“8. In evenly balanced cases the doubt should be resolved in favor of the individual claimant.
“ Yery respectfully,
“Chas. H. Allen,
“Acting Secretary.
“ Auditor for the Navy Department,
Treasury Departm.ent.”

In the preparation of the distributive lists and in the payment of individual captors or participants in the engagements in the recent war with Spain we are advised that the rules thus formulated have been adhered to.

We have carefully examined the basis or rules thus formulated, together with the reasons therefor set forth in the communication of the Auditor for the Navy Department, and we are of opinion that the same are in conformity with and in furtherance of the statute.

As to other questions asked by the auditor of the court and not covered by the foregoing basis, we instruct him as follows:

(9) The officers, naval cadets, enlisted men, private marines, and members of the crew are entitled to share in the bounty awarded to the vessel on which they were serving, in obedience to orders, during the engagement, though their pay ac-cqunt may have been kept on other vessels or at the Naval Academy.

(10) .Revised Statutes, section 4631, paragraph 5, provides that after the deductions mentioned in the preceding paragraphs “the residue shall be distributed and proportioned among all others doing duty on board, including the fleet captain, and borne upon the books of the ship, in proportion to th'eir respective rates of pay in the service.” That evidently means the regular rates of pay to which they were entitled at the time of the engagement, and not the additional pay to which “petty officers and persons of inferior ratings” were temporarily entitled under the provisions of sections 1422 and 1572, and such temporary pay for detention beyond [204]*204the terms of their service should not be added to their regular rates of pay in determining their proportion of such bounty.

(11) By the act of April 26, 1898, section 6 (30 Stat. L., 365), it is provided “that in time of war the pay proper of enlisted men shall be increased 20 per centum over and above the rates of paj1- as ñxed by law,” but that no additional increase for “performing what is known as extra or special dutjT” shall be allowed.

Revised Statutes, section 1612, provides that the officers and enlisted men in the Marine Corps are entitled to the same pay as “ officers and enlisted men of like grades in the infantry of the Army.”

This 20 per centum additional pay the Auditor for the Navy Department has.construed as part of the regular pajr of the marines, and to get at the basis of their share in the distribution of prize money he has added that increase to their regular pay. This construction, we think, is correct, and must, therefore, form the basis for the distribution of bounty.

(12) In reference to the right of the officers and men of the United States Marine Corps under'Lieutenant-Colonel Huntington to share in the bounty awarded to the Resolute, the report of the colonel commandant of the Marine Corps for the year 1898 (p. 6) shows that the battalion under Lieutenant-Colonel Huntington was organized for service in Cuba, ivas transported thither on the U. S. S. Panther, a transport, was landed at Guantanamo Bay June 10, 1898, and remained on shore until August 5, 1898, when the battalion embarked on board the U. S. S. Resolute for transport, where it remained until August 26, 1898, when it disembarked at Portsmouth, N. H.

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Related

Clinch v. United States
44 Ct. Cl. 242 (Court of Claims, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ct. Cl. 200, 1901 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1900 WL 1397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engagement-off-santiago-bay-cc-1901.