Farrar and Brown v. United States

30 U.S. 373, 8 L. Ed. 159, 5 Pet. 373, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 30 U.S. 373 (Farrar and Brown v. 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
Farrar and Brown v. United States, 30 U.S. 373, 8 L. Ed. 159, 5 Pet. 373, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 358 (1831).

Opinion

Johnson, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court. — This was a suit instituted below, against the plaintiffs here, to recover a debt of $30,000, for which they had become bound to the United States, as sureties for one Rector ; who is described in the bond as “ surveyor of the public lands in the states of Illinois and Missouri, and the territory of Arkansas.” The plea was performance, and the breach alleged in the replication is in these words : “that at the time of the execution of the bond, there were in the hands of the said William Rector, as such surveyor, to be by him, in the discharge of the duties of his office, applied and disbursed for the use and benefit of the plaintiffs, divers sums of money, amounting, &c., and that the said William Rector hath not applied and disbursed the same money, or any part thereof, for the use and benefit of the plaintiffs, as in the execution of the duties of his said offiee he ought to have done.” On this plea, issue was taken, and at the trial, a bill of exceptions was taken to sundry instructions of the court, given or refused, which will be considered in their proper place. Two questions of a more general character must first be disposed of.

The first arises on the form of the judgment; the jury having found for the plaintiffs below, on the breach assigned, assess the damages for breach of the condition, at $41,000 ; and the judgment rendered is “ quod recuperet,” the damages, not the debt aforesaid. The parties, plaintiffs in errror, are the sureties, and it is perfectly clear, that as to them, a judgment cannot be rendered beyond the penalty, to be discharged on payment of what is actually due; which, of course, can only be, where it is a sum less than the penalty. It is proposed, on behalf of the United States, to release the surplus, and such'is their right; but this still leaves the form of the judgment uncured and unamended. It would seem, that in adopting this form of rendering judgment, the court below has been misled by the application of the 26th section of the act of 1789 to this subject. If so, it is a clear misapprehension ; since that section, if it sanctions such *a judgment at r*oS(, all, is expressly confined to three cases — default, confession, or *- demurrer ; with neither of which is the present case affected. There is no doubt, then, that the judgment must be reversed on this ground; but as other points, as well as those made in the bill of exceptions, might again embarrass the cause in the court below, and would most probably bring it back again here, it becomes necessary to consider those points.

The seeond preliminary point alluded to is, whether the bond was not taken without law, or contrary to law, so as to be illegal and invalid. This turns on the official character assigned to Rector in the bond, or on that in *248 which, in fact, he is to be regarded in law. He is described as surveyor of public land in certain districts, not as surveyor-general. And such, in fact, was his literal character, for the office of surveyor-general still exists, nominally unique, although a large proportion of his powers and duties have been transferred to the surveyors of public lands in certain districts, subsequently detached from the region over which his powers were originally extended. In deciding on this point, three questions are to be considered ; 1st, whether he was bound to give bond at all; 2d, whether the words of the condition embrace the duties of a disbursing officer ; and 3d, whether those duties were incident to his office.

Upon looking through all the laws passed upon this subject, it can hardly be doubted, that this officer was intended to be included in the provision of the act of May 7th, 1822, requiring security of the surveyor-general. Literally, there was, at that time, provision made under the laws for only one surveyor-general; but it is abundantly evident, that the officer who gave this bond was intended to be included in the provisions of that act, under the description of a surveyor-general. The indiscriminate use of this appellation in the previous and subsequent legislation of congress on the subject, will lead us to this conclusion. Until the passing of the act of Febuary 28th, 1806, all the surveying for the United States was carried on under the provisions of the act of May 18th, 1796, as amended by the act of May 10th, 1800 ; and under the control and superintendence of the surveyor- general. * In the year 1806, after the ^purchase of Louisiana, the powers of that J officer were extended to the country newly acquired, and he was enjoined to appoint a sufficient nnmber of skilful surveyors, as deputies, one of whom, to be appointed with the approbation of the secretary of the treasury, rvas to assume the character of principal deputy, and to exercise over the co-deputies the general power vested in and exercised previously by the surveyor-general. The subordinate character of all these officers was distinctly marked by that act; and yet we find, that in the act of March 3d, 1807, in the second section of the act, the epithet of surveyor-general is expressly applied to that individual of them who should have been employed in surveying the public lands south of the Tennessee. (2 U. S. Stat. 440.) Tet at a subsequent day, to wit, March 3d, 1815 (3 Ibid. 229,) we find the same officer designated generally as a surveyor of that district of country. So also, when the act of April 29th, 1816, was passed, which abolished the appointment of these deputies, and conferred the appointment of their present substitutes upon the president, the latter are simply designated as a surveyor, and not surveyor-general. Tet when the act of May 7th, 1822, is passed, requiring bond to be given by these officers, it is expressed altogether in the plural number, as recognising the existence of more than one surveyor-general.

There were, then, no other officers in existence, besides the actual surveyor-general, who could come within the literal enactments of that statute ; unless we include a surveyor appointed under the provisions of the act of April 29th, 1816. That is the present obligor. And if further confirmation be required to establish the necessary extension of the provisions of that law to tho present cause, w.e have it in the act of May 26th, 1824, in the second section of that act; the language of which expressly recongises the existence of more tnan one surveyor-general. It is clear, then, that frmn the *249 time that the appointment of deputies by the surveyor-general was superseded by the appointment of surveyors by the treasury department, the independent character in which whose officers then acted, identified them with the surveyor-general, so far as to have led to the use of language by congress, adapted to confounding them with the surveyor-general. We, therefore, have no doubt, that they were included in the '^provisions of the act which required bonds to be taken on their accession to *- office. Nor do we think that there is any more doubt, that the law contemplates them as disbursing officers. It is express in requiring them to give bond for the faithful disbursement of public money ; and cid bono do this, if they were not regarded as disbursing officers ?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 U.S. 373, 8 L. Ed. 159, 5 Pet. 373, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrar-and-brown-v-united-states-scotus-1831.